I’m With You review in the September issue of Uncut Magazine!
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I’m With You review in the September issue of Uncut Magazine!
Red Hot Chili Peppers’ new album, I’m With You reviewed by music journalist, John Lewis in the September 2011 issue of Uncut Magazine (Page 86). Scan and transcript below…
I'm With You Album Review Uncut Magazine September 2011 Red Hot Chili Peppers
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Minus their guitarist, the chili peppers are a little bit mild. By John Lewis – Uncut Magazine, September 2011.
EVEN IN THE tardy world of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, for whom several years between albums is nothing remarkable, the five-and-a-half year gap that has preceded I’m With You is considerable. Especially when their last album, the global chart-topping Stadium Arcadium, was such a display of fecundity – two CDs, 28 tracks, nearly all of them pretty good – that went on to sell nearly eight million copies worldwide.
In the interim, they have been busy. Front man Anthony Kiedis has, apparently, been working on an HBO series based on his Rabelaisian memoir Scar Tissue. Drummer Chad Smith has formed a metal supergroup, Chickenfoot, with Sammy Hagar and Joe Satriani and an instrumental jazz-rock band, Chad Smith’s Bombastic Meatbats. Bassist Flea went to Nigeria with Damon Albarn’s African Express, toured with Thorn Yorke’s Atoms For Peace, and went to a conservatoire to study music theory, composition and jazz trumpet.
More pertinently, however, Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist John Frusciante- a key member for over twenty years- has left the band for the second time. Listening to a playback of new RHCP album, I’m With You, one can definitely hear a John Frusciante-shaped hole in the proceedings, prompting us to consider exactly what qualities he brought to the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Their first three albums, all recorded without him tended to compromise riff-based, single-chord funk jams. It was John Frusciante’s arrival, on 1989’s Mother’s Milk, that changed all that. Instead of being a facsimile funk-rock band – a blend of Funkadelic, Defunkt and Gang Of Four – they slowly morphed into a rock band who held their funk chops in reserve and began to explore more properly structured songs.
The last time John Frusciante quit, before 1995′s One Hot Minute, they enlisted Dave Navarro of Jane’s Addiction, who turned them into a rather maudlin metal act. This time they’ve gone with journeyman guitarist Josh Klinghoffer. He’s more than a decade younger than the other Red Hot Chili Peppers and boasts a highly respectable CV – stints with PJ Harvey, Gnarls Barkley, Beck and the Butthole Surfers, and even a stint playing as John Frusciante’s sideman on a string of solo records. But Josh Klinghoffer seems to lack the spiky inventiveness of his old mentor. On several tracks he sounds bereft of ideas, just waiting for the breakdown of each song to play a ponderous-sounding chord tempered wit h some wobbly effect, in the style of Andy Summers from The Police. The lead single “The Adventures Of Rain Dance Maggie” has a solo so amateurish it sounds like it’s been pasted in as a joke by the studio’s tea boy.
In places, I’m With You sounds like a parody of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. “Ethiopia”, a plodding by-numbers funk-rock jam, is topped by some rambling Anthony Kiedis doggerel (“Tell my boy I love him so/Tell him so he knows/Lost in Ethiopia/ washed out on that road”), “Look Around” is another schematic funk workout that starts with some ill-advised Anthony Kiedis rapping (“Hustle me bitch and you’d best beware/Don’t try and tap your round peg into my square”) and doesn’t get much better. “Factory Of Faith” sounds like an end-of-the-pier Franz Ferdinand tribute act.
And yet, and yet, amid this poor material, the Red Hot Chili Peppers still manage to deliver a handful of very, very good songs. The more interesting of these largely jettison Josh Klinghoffer’s guitar and foreground the piano, apparently written by Flea and played by long time Red Hot Chili Peppers collaborator Greg Kurstin. “Even You Brutus?” starts with a “Mr Blue Sky” four-to-the-bar piano stomp that quickly mutates into a compelling hip hop-tinged groove. “Happiness Loves Company” is a jangly, piano-led, 70s-style number in a similar lyrical vein to “Under The Bridge”. And “Police Station” is a lovelorn piano ballad which appears to be about a fallen Hollywood idol who now appears to spend her entire life in and out of police custody. It will doubtless be used to soundtrack some low-budget TV cut-and-clip documentary about Lindsay Lohan in the near future.
The other standout tracks are similarly atypical of the band. “Did I Let You Know” is a furious Afrobeat collage, with off-kilter drumming, hi-life guitar, some timbales and a cracking trumpet solo. It also – be warned -has Anthony Kiedis rhyming “freaky” with “Mozambiquey”
Brendan s Death Song is an acoustic ballad which pays tribute to Brendan Mullen, the LA nightclub owner who gave the band their first break: “Like I said, you know! I’m almost dead/I’m almost gone/When the boatman comes to ferry me away/to where we all belong” Both suggests that, post-John Frusciante, the Red Hot Chili Peppers could be due another radical change in direction. In all probability, though, we’ll be waiting another five years to find out where it all leads.
I'm With You Album Review Uncut Magazine September 2011 Red Hot Chili Peppers
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
Minus their guitarist, the chili peppers are a little bit mild. By John Lewis – Uncut Magazine, September 2011.
EVEN IN THE tardy world of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, for whom several years between albums is nothing remarkable, the five-and-a-half year gap that has preceded I’m With You is considerable. Especially when their last album, the global chart-topping Stadium Arcadium, was such a display of fecundity – two CDs, 28 tracks, nearly all of them pretty good – that went on to sell nearly eight million copies worldwide.
In the interim, they have been busy. Front man Anthony Kiedis has, apparently, been working on an HBO series based on his Rabelaisian memoir Scar Tissue. Drummer Chad Smith has formed a metal supergroup, Chickenfoot, with Sammy Hagar and Joe Satriani and an instrumental jazz-rock band, Chad Smith’s Bombastic Meatbats. Bassist Flea went to Nigeria with Damon Albarn’s African Express, toured with Thorn Yorke’s Atoms For Peace, and went to a conservatoire to study music theory, composition and jazz trumpet.
More pertinently, however, Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist John Frusciante- a key member for over twenty years- has left the band for the second time. Listening to a playback of new RHCP album, I’m With You, one can definitely hear a John Frusciante-shaped hole in the proceedings, prompting us to consider exactly what qualities he brought to the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Their first three albums, all recorded without him tended to compromise riff-based, single-chord funk jams. It was John Frusciante’s arrival, on 1989’s Mother’s Milk, that changed all that. Instead of being a facsimile funk-rock band – a blend of Funkadelic, Defunkt and Gang Of Four – they slowly morphed into a rock band who held their funk chops in reserve and began to explore more properly structured songs.
The last time John Frusciante quit, before 1995′s One Hot Minute, they enlisted Dave Navarro of Jane’s Addiction, who turned them into a rather maudlin metal act. This time they’ve gone with journeyman guitarist Josh Klinghoffer. He’s more than a decade younger than the other Red Hot Chili Peppers and boasts a highly respectable CV – stints with PJ Harvey, Gnarls Barkley, Beck and the Butthole Surfers, and even a stint playing as John Frusciante’s sideman on a string of solo records. But Josh Klinghoffer seems to lack the spiky inventiveness of his old mentor. On several tracks he sounds bereft of ideas, just waiting for the breakdown of each song to play a ponderous-sounding chord tempered wit h some wobbly effect, in the style of Andy Summers from The Police. The lead single “The Adventures Of Rain Dance Maggie” has a solo so amateurish it sounds like it’s been pasted in as a joke by the studio’s tea boy.
In places, I’m With You sounds like a parody of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. “Ethiopia”, a plodding by-numbers funk-rock jam, is topped by some rambling Anthony Kiedis doggerel (“Tell my boy I love him so/Tell him so he knows/Lost in Ethiopia/ washed out on that road”), “Look Around” is another schematic funk workout that starts with some ill-advised Anthony Kiedis rapping (“Hustle me bitch and you’d best beware/Don’t try and tap your round peg into my square”) and doesn’t get much better. “Factory Of Faith” sounds like an end-of-the-pier Franz Ferdinand tribute act.
And yet, and yet, amid this poor material, the Red Hot Chili Peppers still manage to deliver a handful of very, very good songs. The more interesting of these largely jettison Josh Klinghoffer’s guitar and foreground the piano, apparently written by Flea and played by long time Red Hot Chili Peppers collaborator Greg Kurstin. “Even You Brutus?” starts with a “Mr Blue Sky” four-to-the-bar piano stomp that quickly mutates into a compelling hip hop-tinged groove. “Happiness Loves Company” is a jangly, piano-led, 70s-style number in a similar lyrical vein to “Under The Bridge”. And “Police Station” is a lovelorn piano ballad which appears to be about a fallen Hollywood idol who now appears to spend her entire life in and out of police custody. It will doubtless be used to soundtrack some low-budget TV cut-and-clip documentary about Lindsay Lohan in the near future.
The other standout tracks are similarly atypical of the band. “Did I Let You Know” is a furious Afrobeat collage, with off-kilter drumming, hi-life guitar, some timbales and a cracking trumpet solo. It also – be warned -has Anthony Kiedis rhyming “freaky” with “Mozambiquey”
Brendan s Death Song is an acoustic ballad which pays tribute to Brendan Mullen, the LA nightclub owner who gave the band their first break: “Like I said, you know! I’m almost dead/I’m almost gone/When the boatman comes to ferry me away/to where we all belong” Both suggests that, post-John Frusciante, the Red Hot Chili Peppers could be due another radical change in direction. In all probability, though, we’ll be waiting another five years to find out where it all leads.
Tanja- Yertle The Turtle
- Number of posts : 10378
Age : 32
Location : under the bridge downtown
Registration date : 2009-08-12
Re: I’m With You review in the September issue of Uncut Magazine!
It will doubtless be used to soundtrack some low-budget TV cut-and-clip documentary about Lindsay Lohan in the near future.
In all probability, though, we’ll be waiting another five years to find out where it all leads.
Pa, covjek ima pravo na svoje misljenje. A slazem se u vezi za ovu prekretnicu. Vrlo lako moguce da je ovo neka prekretnica...
All in all-tnx MAN
RedHeaded- I am what I am Most motherfuckers Don't give a damn
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Age : 29
Location : Zagreb
Registration date : 2011-05-26
Nick The Spamlord- Yertle The Turtle
- Number of posts : 12176
Age : 33
Location : Green Heaven
Registration date : 2008-11-18
Re: I’m With You review in the September issue of Uncut Magazine!
nema na cemu @RedHeaded @Nick! :eace:
Re: I’m With You review in the September issue of Uncut Magazine!
Realno, do neke promene je moralo doći s obzirom da imaju novog člana, čak iako su John i Josh ranije sarađivali, a konačan zaključak kako sve to zvuči ću doneti tek kad sama odlušam sve pesme (with all due respect to John Lewis )
Anywayz, thanx Man
Anywayz, thanx Man
LuckY- I am what I am Most motherfuckers Don't give a damn
- Number of posts : 1569
Age : 36
Location : Leskovac
Registration date : 2009-06-17
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