 | Tracklist: 1. Dimestore Diamond
2. Heavy Cross
3. 8th Wonder
4. Love Long Distance
5. Pop Goes The World
6. Vertical Rhythm
7. Men In Love
8. For Keeps
9. 2012
10. Love And Let Love
11. Four Letter Word
Release Date: 06/22/2009 | |
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On 2 Lists
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| Summary: A rainbow-coloured fist to the face of detractors, haters and former lovers. The Gossip you've heard is all true. |
2 of 2 thought this review was well written
Before we begin analysing the music of Gossip, on their fourth album (and their first for a major label) Music For Men, we must get a few words out of the way. Lord knows how many reviews of this band and their work have been plagued with obsessions over these two words and their connection to Gossip, and you, dear reader, don’t need another one. So let’s get it out of the way first.
The words are “overweight” and “lesbian”.
All synonyms included.
Ever since vocalist Beth Ditto became paparazzi fresh meat around 2006 and the runaway success of the band’s last record, Standing in the Way of Control, the image of the band has played a huge part in their exposure. Whilst there are certainly bold statements to come from a two-thirds lesbian band with an outspoken frontwoman in terms of image alone, hindsight should never be lost of the powerful, punk-inspired alternative rock that the collective creates. As if to prove this, the Gossip have returned with Music for Men – their defining moment in their career thus far. A brash, uncompromising, powerful and downright exciting work of art, this is the Gossip at their most certain and assured in their songwriting abilities – making it all the better in the process.
At its core, the album picks up where Standing in the Way... left off. Fans from previous albums won’t be disappointed with the continuation of soulful melodies leading a charge of guitar snarl, slinking bass and Hannah Billie’s driving drums and percussion that defined their work. Tracks such as the invigorating “8th Wonder” epitomise the Gossip fanfare we have grown accustomed to, sounding like vintage Aretha Franklin at her most inspired fronting Gang of Four. Opener “Dimestore Diamond”, too, is a husky blues stomp with a gritty walking bass and lyrical socioeconomic undertones.
It is the expansion and progression upon this sound, however, which is certain to attain new fans. With legendary producer Rick Rubin behind the desk, the trio have expanded their sound to blend in synth-infused and dance-oriented dance influences. The band have certainly embraced such influences before, but never to the fully-realised extent that is found on here. “Pop Goes The World” is a guaranteed hip-shaker, whilst “Love and Let Love” is the most heartbroken you can get on the dancefloor.
The embodiment of the progression’s successfulness, ultimately, is bundled into a three-and-a-half minute extravaganza known as lead single “Heavy Cross”. A frantic, energetic and powerful performance, the song thrives on Brace Paine’s layered, swaggering guitar mixed with groove-infested beats, handclaps and an eighties-flavoured synth undercurrent that remains consistent throughout. That’s not even mentioning Ditto’s sensational vocal performance – the call to arms of “If it’s already been done, undo it” and “It’s up to me and you to prove it” is sung with such conviction that you are more than willing to do anything she says.
To hell with it, the woman deserves her own paragraph. Ditto is evolving into an iconic figure in music; proving there’s far more to being “alternative” in the pop realm than your Pinks or Katy Perrys. Her wild, Otis Redding-esque howls and moans are occasionally watered-down on Music for Men, but this does not depreciate the value of the songs slightly – in fact, it allows Ditto to attempt more sultry, passionate vocals. She accomplishes this on lower-key numbers such as the sexy “Vertical Rhythm”, as well as the heartfelt balladry of “For Keeps” and the electronica slow jam of “Four Letter Word”. A near-faultless singer, Ditto has never sounded more confident and impassioned than on Music for Men.
Standing in the Way of Control was the Gossip warming up. Music for Men, now, is the main event. Beth, Brace and Hannah have created a career-defining work of art that spits on the norm and shifts the focus away from public imagery over to where the focus should have been in the beginning – the exceptional music. For men. For women. For all that are willing to listen.
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Heavy Cross is a great single, but the huge amounts of neg press around Ditto have kept me from listening to more of their stuff. Review makes it seem pretty promising though, so will have to check it out.
Digging: Daitro - Y
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
Please don't let the press fool you, man. A lot of them are just pigs.
Digging: Biffy Clyro - Only Revolutions | | | heavy cross sucks. standing in the way of control's title track was pretty awesome until i heard it one million times. band now annoys me to no end. i don't like the singer's voice but i must admit, she can fucking sing holy shit
Digging: Weekend Nachos - Unforgivable
| | | I haven't heard anything from this album as yet, but didn't mind the title track off their last album. I'd like to see Ali's rebuttal of this review before listening to it.
Gee DavID, you've handed out a few high ratings this year, haven't you? Have you got a mid-year top 5 list as such?
Digging: Paloma Faith - Do You Want the Truth or Something Beautiful?
| | | Yeah, definitely sounds, well, interesting. I'll save further judgments for when I hear it (the near future).
Digging: The Red Chord - Fed Through the Teeth Machine
| | | Yah, a lot of them tend to focus on her being, well... an obese lesbian, and not much else.
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
Have you got a mid-year top 5 list as such?
1. Merriweather
2. Mean Everything
3. This
4. It's Not Me It's You
5. Sound Awake
| | | I've never seen a large farm animal behind a microphone before.
Digging: Devin Townsend Project - Addicted
| | | hey atavanhalen guess what cog are in my town and are playing at my local venue i bet you're super jealous. also, heavy cross just came on the radio. no idea why i dislike that song so much, but i hate it more and more every time i hear it it just makes me wanna fuck shit i up i can't even
would i like anything else off this?
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
Hey guess what Spare I've already see Cog twice this year.
Listen to 8th Wonder.
| | | oh goddammit you motherfu- ok i'll listen to that.
| | | Album Rating: 3.5
Love the three song stretch from "Heavy Cross" to "Love Long Distance".
Digging: Elliott Smith - Either/Or | | | Just heard 'Heavy Cross' and was not impressed. I didn't think it was "energetic" or "powerful" at all. In fact, it was subdued at stages. Almost as if Ditto was holding back.
| | | Single's alright, prefer Standing...
Digging: Pixies - Surfer Rosa
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
@Lucidity - Word
@Champ Kind - Wrong
@Titan - Most people do
| | | Album Rating: 2
good review though i disagree.
Digging: Converge - Axe To Fall | | | Album Rating: 4.5
Delightfully agree.
Digging: Former Ghosts - "fleurs" | | | Album Rating: 2
alternative pop is florence and the machines, this is just shit
Digging: The National - Alligator | | | Album Rating: 4.5
defs not as good as nu agen
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Digging: The Flaming Lips - Embryonic
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