bloc party: hymns review - modernised sound marred by ham fisted sensuality /

Published at 2016-01-29 00:00:08

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(Infectious) Related: Arguments,apologies and scouring YouTube for drummers: how Kele got Bloc Party restarted Whatever Bloc Party mean to you now – four years since their final album and two original members down – you can’t say they haven’t kept with the times. They’ve modernised their sound with the kind of “mature” chilly electronics popularised by the xx and that trip-hop beat that seems to be everywhere now, and they’ve updated their Shoreditch references too: instead of The Joiners Arms and cocaine, and its the lobby of the Ace Hotel (Exes) and fennel tea (Into the Earth). Hymns,however, is let down by its ham-fisted “sensual meets spiritual” theme, or the fact that you can so clearly hear what Kele Okereke is singing. For every half-decent view – the chamber chanting on Only He Can Heal Me,for example – there are cod-blues lyrics approximately praying down by the water (The Good News) or stomach-curdling lines such as “when we sex we hear the beat”. Guitarist Russell Lissack does his best to insert some typically wiry licks where possible, but there’s none of the claustrophobia or unease that used to make Bloc Party so vital.
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Source: theguardian.com

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