Artist: Interpol Release Date: August 20, 2002 Label: Matador Records Running time: 49 min. Featuring: Samuel Fogarino : drums Daniel Kessler : guitar Carlos Dengler : bass and keyboards Paul Banks : vocals and guitar ~:~ Album recorded & mixed November 2001 Arranged, Engineered & Mixed by Peter Katis, Gareth Jones and Greg Calbi
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Interpol prove themselves to be men on a mission to take us back to a time when long faces and even longer overcoats were de rigueur... ~ Playlouder
If I like them because they remind me of eating bad bathtub mescaline in the woods and listening to Cure singles, well, that'll do. You might like them for completely different reasons. ~ Village Voice
The Songs: 1. Untitled - 3:56 ~ A pounding, reverberating, we've got the amps dragged into an aircraft hanger and turned up to 11 opener. It's a theatrical, methodical, forlorn manifesto - "I'll surprise you / sometime / and come around" - complete with klaxon guitars, megaphone vocals, and vaguely 1984 atmosphere (albeit more Sisters of Mercy than Ministry of Truth). ~ 2. Obstacle 1 - 4:11 ~ Riveting material. Pointy shiny shoes, long wool trench coats, big mirrored sunglasses, too much caffeine and overlong bangs - it's all back in (as if it was ever out) and this here's the rallying cry. Grab the kohl and get to it. ~ 3. NYC - 4:19 ~ Appropriately enough, this symphonic track is the album's clincher, a lonely bittersweet serenade to life and love in a deeply troubled city - "I had seven faces / thought I knew which one to wear / sick of spending these lonely nights / training myself not to care" - If you can somehow manage to get through its over-the-top, self-reliant McCullough-like swoon without smirking with glee, then time to more on. This record's not your thing ~ 4. PDA - 4:59~ Turning now more towards the horizon of sparse, existential post-punk - "You're the only person / whose completely certain / that there's nothing here to be in to..." - this track seems to have been chosen as the single: it has a killer guitar/bass line about three minutes up that should shore up a few zillion megawatts of radio play ~ 5. Say Hello to the Angels - 4:28~ Sounds, god help me, like the Strokes without their injections, covering early Wire ... the bass line here is amazing, the lyrics amusingly delivered, but it's a wee bit too pastiche. The one track that they should lose. ~ 6. Hands Away - 3:05~ New wave, proto-goth wailing, a la Clan of Xymox or Japan (yum!) ~ 7. Obstacle 2 - 3:47~ By all rights, this should have been the single. Absolutely deadpan distant vocal styling, trapped below the surface icy, bound up emotive vocals - "it takes a long time / just to get this frustrated" - complete with a howling at the moon, oh my heart is breaking wrap-up. Ian Curtis is somewhere, smiling gladly to see he's made an impression... ~ 8. Stella Was A Diver and She Was Always Down - 6:27~ Just outright fuct up, inexplicable in text ~ 9. Roland - 3:35~ Visceral power pop, up there with the loudest Husker Du or Pixies, with some great nonsense lines - "Oh look! It stopped snowing ..." - frenetic, frantic and menacing. Glacially sweet. ~ 10. The New - 6:07~ This ballad is a little posed than the other love songs - "I can't pretend / I need to defend / Some part of me from you" - and sounds a bit more like Modest Mouse reinterpreting a Church single (that will either pique your interest, or it won't). This isn't to say it's quiet, as the bass line ratchets up, we hear there's a little more than just fear and frustration going on. Over the course of the song, the listener is dragged along a roller-coaster of dysfunction. Fantastic songwriting, a singular bit of work. ~ 11. Leif Erikson - 4:00~ A murky, maudlin, smoke-hazy ballad done in a howling, baritone growl - "She doesn't know that I left my urge in the icebox / she swears I'm prey for the females" - wrapping up the record on an exquisite note.~
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