Times New Viking -
Born Again Revisited (CD purchased 9/19/09)
I love this band so I'm probably a little biased, but this is another fantastic album from them. It might not be quite as great as
Rip It Off - which in retrospect was the best album of 2008 - but for me this one feels more like a manifesto, a mission statement.
This is Times New Viking. This is how they sound, who they are, just the way they want it. You can take it or leave it. The oppressively loud, blown-out "production" is deliberately, undeniably still here, and there's not even an immediately catchy or remotely "friendly" song until the third track. It's the sixth track where they lay down the gauntlet, though. "No Time, No Hope" is one the greatest rock anthems of our time, a fist-pumping scream-along for the ages. I have to think that maybe covering Arcade Fire (the cover itself was terrible, IMO, and I wouldn't recommend seeking it out) rubbed off on them in far better ways than could have been imagined. Clearly TNV heard something in AF's music that they wanted to emulate, and in "No Time, No Hope" they've created that same kind of energy but with a greater momentum and, in my opinion, stronger song craft.
The highs don't stop with that song, however. Weighted more toward the back half than the front,
Born Again Revisited packs in several more heavy hitters before the close of its brisk 30 minutes, namely "2/11 Don't Forget", "These Days", "Hustler, Psycho, Son" and "Move to California". Plus the more I've listened to this album, the more the cluster of tense, scrappy numbers at the beginning of the album has grown on me. The "filler" on TNV albums isn't really that at all, and in this case they serve as tension builders and ramp-ups for the big climaxes. That is, if they aren't really just ends in and of themselves. The title track, opener "Martin Luther King Day", and "I Smell Bubblegum" all have a certain antagonistic charm. It's sort of like listening to The Fall. If you're trying to figure out if you like them or not, or what it is exactly that they're "trying to do", they can just sound flat out awful most of time. But once you're in on it, once you've been drawn into Mark E. Smith's world, even some of the lesser, more overlooked tracks on their better albums endear themselves because they carry that same vitriol and cynicism in a purer form, with no attempts made to meet anyone halfway with gratifying hooks or melodies. This isn't some band of trend-hoppers, or hapless kids who got lucky with a record deal but can't figure out how to play their instruments or utilize a studio properly. They've done their homework, and they know what they're doing. I think their work will endure, and in time the strength of these songs will show just how far ahead of the pack they always were.
Rating:
9/10