by CC Ward » Sun May 20, 2012 12:29 pm
By way of introducktion, I'm a long-time Bunnyfan from the Colonies. I purchased, on a whim, a vinyl copy of Crocodiles in 1980 which saw so much needle-time it needed replaced the next year, which I did on the same day I bought HUH.
So I'm going to address the knee-jerk negativity that has been leveled at Pro Patria Mori, mainly by Amerifans like me:
If one could wear digital files out in the same manner as records, my PPM would already be crackling -- I've played it A BUNCH since getting it Thursday; I fucking HEART this album. No, there are no "kerrang moments" -- but that's OK. One thing about Mac, one of the things that makes him the genius he is, is that he never forgets that edginess alone is not what gets a record stuck in your head and wins it a place in your heart. Mac knows a song needs hooks and texture, and that a record needs unified production values and a singular identity. He obviously didn't feel the need to make it a sequel to The Fountain, and it's clearly not an Electrafixion album, so why should it sound like one?
I'm roughly the same age as Mac. I can tell you that it's embarrassing when our peers put out records that are shameless retreadings of their glory days or laughable attempts at co-opting the current styles. Mac, thankfully, has made a smart and dignified Mac record; he has not given us a pastiche of pierced-peepee-and-full-body-tattoo crap-metal, nor has he done a "Gee, wasn't Ocean Rain swell? Remember '84? It never got any better, did it?" nostalgia-fest wank opera. Nor would he. Which is why I'm a fan; he leaves the looking like a posing cunt biz to Julian Cope, the "Look at me, I swear I'm still relevant!" act to Robert Pollard and the pretentiousness to Sting and Bono. In other words; still the real deal. A rock star's rock star.
PPM's peer list, by my reckoning, includes all the best records by Scott Walker and Richard Hawley -- it playlists well with these guys, as well as being a thematic cousin to Candleland. It's fucking brilliant, in other words.
Standouts: "Fiery Flame", "Raindrop on the Sun" and "Somewhere in my Dreams".