Meds [Bonus Tracks]Placebo
Release Date: 01/23/2007
Original Release:
2006
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 968192_CD
UPC # 094638507529
Label: Virgin Records (USA)
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping |
|
Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Placebo
Artist: Michael Stipe Producer: Dimitri Tikovoi; James Razor Brown; Dimitri Tikovoi Distributor: EMI Music Distribution Notes: Placebo: Brian Molko (vocals, guitar); Stefan Olsdal (bass guitar); Robert Schultzberg (drums). Personnel: Alison Mosshart (vocals); Sarah Button, Lucy Wilkins, Jessie Murphy, Dave "Soulfingers" Williams, Deborah L. White, Ellie Stanford, Natalia Bonner, Gita Langley (violin); Katherine Shave, Fiona Griffiths, Emma Owens (viola); Helena Rathbone, Sara Wilson (cello). Additional personnel: Michael Stipe. Audio Mixers: Dimitri Tikovoi; Dave Bascombe; James Razor Brown . Recording information: Angel Studios, Islington, London, England; Livingston Studios, London, England; Rak Studios, London, England; Sanctuary Town House; Sarm Studios; Snake Ranch. Photographer: Nadav Kander. English rock outfit Placebo have earned themselves a cozy niche on the new millennium Britpop map with their combination of moody, edgy guitar sounds, post-grunge punch, and theatrical flair. MEDS, Placebo's fifth release, finds the band refining the best qualities of their previous albums into a stylish, streamlined whole that shows them moving forward and maturing. "Fall Into You" blends punky energy with emo-tinged confessional expression, a sound that links Placebo to many early-2000s bands, but maintains a distinctive edge. Placebo know their rock history, drawing on driving post-punk a la Joy Division ("Song to Say Goodbye") and moody Cure-influenced tunes ("Follow the Cops Back Home"), but it's on nervous, anthemic rockers like "Infra-Red" that the band is at their best. With 2004's release of Placebo's singles collection, the band reaffirmed that it has never quite fit into any particular fad. Their success has been gradual in the sense that their style and sound have progressed naturally with each album. Meds builds upon that notion while also embarking on a new phase for Placebo. Meds is their second coming. Frontman Brian Molko is no longer the glam-chic, gender-bending firestarter he once was. His songs are still angry and twisted in self-reflection and social rejection. Meds doesn't contain the rush to experiment like their previous records do. It's as bare and honest as Placebo have ever been, thanks to French producer Dimitri Tikovoi's straightforward approach in getting the band to make a bona fide rock record. There's a fresh vulnerability here and a sense of danger, too; the album's title track quickly enters this sphere. It's an obsessive moment confronting the social hypnosis and dependence of medication. The Kills' Alison Mosshart lends an anxious vocal backdrop as Placebo deliver an aggressive guitar-driven assault. Meds doesn't stop for breath until its end. Fans should be pleased with the menacing "Infra-Red" and the sexy ensnaring of "One of a Kind," two tracks that showcase Placebo's signature fiery performance style. When they're not deconstructing social expectations, Placebo's storytelling is equally powerful on the more lilting tracks. The shifty slow burn of "Space Monkey" is an epic ballad for the band. Placebo step out of their skin here. A squall of fuzzed guitars, strings, and Molko's brooding vocals strike to knock down the celebrity pedestal that creates a false human image. "Broken Promise," a duet with Michael Stipe, takes similar shape as a dramatic tale of adultery unfolds into a dark, emotional storm. Letting go of toxic relationships on "Song to Say Goodbye," a melancholic closing to Meds, brings the album full circle. To some, Meds might come off as less interesting compared to the slickness of older tracks such as "Taste in Men" and "Every You Every Me." Some may be over Molko's constant analysis of sex, drugs, and desire. What you see is what you get with Placebo and, for the first time in a long time, that vision is clear. [The 2007 Virgin reissue includes two bonus tracks.] ~ MacKenzie Wilson
Rolling Stone (p.69) - 3 stars out of 4 -- "Brian Molko's witty self-deprecation and heartfelt choruses make for a stylized darkness with a power-pop spirit."
Kerrang (Magazine) (p.53) - "[T]his repaints Molko as a torch singer for the 21st century."
Mojo (Publisher) (p.108) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he sound is neat, unblended Placebo, particularly on the stand-out track 'Infra-Red'..."
The three founding members of Placebo hailed from Belgium, Sweden, and Switzerland, but their sound was British through and through, a mix of angst-ridden Cure-esque post-punk and glammy art rock a la Bowie. Amid the success of their early albums in the 1990s, they made no secret of their roots, crossing paths with Bowie more than once, covering T. Rex, and appearing in the glam-rock homage VELVET GOLDMINE. However, as album followed album in the '00s, like Bowie, the band expanded beyond its original universe, developing its own brand of darkly majestic, thoroughly neurotic pop.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Ash Auteurs (The) Blue October Blur British Sea Power Buckley, Jeff Coldplay Dandy Warhols (The) Editors Elastica Eve 6 Foo Fighters Futureheads (The) Garbage Gene Good Charlotte Harvey Danger Hole Kaiser Chiefs Killers (US) (The) Kills (The) London Suede (The) Manic Street Preachers Mansun Marilyn Manson Muse My Vitriol Nancy Boy National (The) Oasis Pulp Radiohead Reef Remy Zero She Wants Revenge Supergrass The Smashing Pumpkins Travis (UK) Tsar Verve (The) Weezer Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Influences:
Bauhaus (UK) Bowie, David Cheap Trick Cure (The) Harvey, PJ Jane's Addiction Joy Division Kiss Morrissey New Order (UK) New York Dolls Nirvana (US) Pixies Reed, Lou Roxy Music Sex Pistols (The) Siouxsie and the Banshees Slade Sonic Youth Stooges (The) Sweet T. Rex Talking Heads The Smashing Pumpkins Throwing Muses U2 Velvet Underground (The)
Similar Genres:
Alternative |