Silverchair
Freak Show


3.5
great

Review

by thumbcrusher USER (9 Reviews)
June 8th, 2013 | 11 replies


Release Date: 1997 | Tracklist

Review Summary: A steady evolution towards a more adventurous end.

Coming out two years after the band's 1995 debut and worldwide hit Frogstomp, Freak Show was released when singer and guiatrist Daniel Johns, bassist Chris Joannou and drummer Ben Gillies were all still at the remarkably young age of seventeen. However, while Frogstomp being the huge success it was, their youth showed on it. It resonated most with their fellow youths of the day, still infatuated with the grunge movement which had not quite met its death. Their first album had shown technical and songwriting a maturity far and above their age, but it was an album stuck in the time it was released. With their follow up, they had the chance to carve their own sound and fully establish themselves, and not be passed off as another group of Pearl Jam wannabes.

Freak Show managed to show a certain amount of progression. They grew as musicians and they were as tight a band at this time as any other on the planet as their live performances proved. The huge riffs on 'Slave', 'No Association' and 'The Closing' helped to push their sound into heavier and more metallic territories than they had previously been seen in, and certainly further ahead of the overly clean and harmless post-grunge bands, so many of whom were ascending to the top of the charts at the time. The most impressive change, however, was that the first signs of the orchestral grandeur the band would increasingly use with each future release were also present, amongst the sludge and grit which would quite rapidly disappear on these albums to come. 'Cemetery' and 'Petrol and Chlorine' finely demonstrate this, as does 'Abuse Me' though from a more obviously vulnerable perspective and not abandoning their established grungy sound. But it is the swing of 'The Door' (!) with its thumping, upbeat drive and Eastern twang that is the biggest overhaul in style. There aren't the obvious strings on this track unlike the aforementioned songs, but it manages to be the grandest on the album, and is the biggest sign post towards the band's future.

There are moments throughout the album where it takes the odd tumble. Several of the other gritter numbers, don't manage to have as positive an effect on the album as 'Slave' and 'No Association'. The mediocre 'Roses' fails to set itself apart from most of the 90s grunge and likewise 'Freak', despite being such a successful single, has the dullest riff on the album and is largely unimpressive, which is made worse coming after the riff laden 'Slave'. They borrowed a bit too much from their forefathers with 'Lie To Me' which couldn't want to be on In Utero any more if it tried. These missteps are fortunately some way from derailing the album as a whole, and are comfortably outdone by the more positive elements, but it's annoying if nothing else as even at this stage in their career they were far better than these tracks let on.

On Freak Show Silverchair manage to develop their own sound, and we can see the move to the more adventurous style present on their later work being conceived, while still retaining the thick, gritty grunge that has been pushed towards the heavier regions of metal since Frogstomp. The album is at its best when these styles go as far as possible in these directions, and the tracks which don't do this feel as though they're being left behind. Thankfully, more often than not they explore these new areas to great effect and overcome the more mediocre moments to produce a very solid album.



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user ratings (439)
3.6
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
thumbcrusher
June 8th 2013


3790 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

a high 3.5, hope the review shows that

Cipieron
June 8th 2013


3508 Comments


I have Frogstomp and Diorama, still need to check this out and Neon Ballroom

Good review man, I dug it

thumbcrusher
June 8th 2013


3790 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

cheers man



if you like frogstomp and diorama you'd definitely like this

Cipieron
June 8th 2013


3508 Comments


i always figure i would

but when i see it for cheap at the used media store, the artwork makes me second guess buying it lol

thumbcrusher
June 8th 2013


3790 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

haha well the album's better than the cover suggests

rodrigo90
November 22nd 2018


7387 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Never read the lyrics to nobody came, and damn the story he tells in the song is pretty hardcore.



According to what I understand, the song is written in first person in which a guy kills his father for abusing him and then he starts to harm himself to death, but then he repents for doing it and he cries for help but nobody answers. The song ends with an open ending.

DoofDoof
November 22nd 2018


15006 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

Frogstomped

pengui
August 20th 2019


127 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

A seriously under rated album.

conesmoke
October 18th 2019


7875 Comments


Come on
Abuse me more I like it

pourradass
November 16th 2021


584 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

The Helmet influence on this one is patent.

TrephineArtist
April 25th 2024


285 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

No association - such an excellent track, has aged surprisingly well! I agree the Helmet influence is strong on the album. On this track you can hear it along with the harsher or side of Nirvana and some very metal screams, awesome stuff, especially for such a young band (at the time), impressive!!!







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