I'm living in a Pop Trash Movie directed by Duran Duran. The End?
Jul 13, 2009
Rated a Very Helpful Review by the Epinions community
Pros:I got shivers up my spine writing this review.
Cons:Painfully shunned.
The Bottom Line: Great music to play while pissin' all over the general public.
Okay.
Now they're jaded as all hell.
I was running through my list of Duran Duran albums when it dawned on me that this is the last full-length release I have to review. Just makes me think that seventeen write-ups ago, I rekindled my love for the synth-rock band, discovering and rediscovering catchy pop tunes that span a plethora of styles. From their Timbo-project, their covers record, their debut, their magnum opus, and their darker works, Duran Duran is a band that's thrilling and innovative, always releasing some very interesting music that makes you question if it's truly them. Known for their 80s pop gems, a lot of their later work has gone ignored and under-appreciated-- charts aren't everything, as 1997's Medazzaland proves. They are currently a four-piece band as of the release of their most record record, but in 2000, they worked under their three-piece incarnation. As with their last project, this record has a dense, thick, heavy, bogged-down feel to it with dark beats and a harder edge than what they are most known for. Unlike its predecessor, though, Pop Trash is less chaotic and more psychedelic. Just as hypnotic, it showcases some more classic pop/rock that Warren Curruculo brought to the table before being dismissed before 2004's Astronaut.
This record is the result of writers block and some rather jadedness after the commercial failure of Medazzaland. This record, thus, sticks out like a gigantic sore thumb as sounding the least like the Duran Duran we knew and love. With hard, thrashing drums and crunchy, 60's-esque guitar interludes, Pop Trash is the drowsiest of all the D-Squared records. This record stands as their least successful to date-- commercially. Musically, it's a savory treat that I can listen to multiple times and always find something new. On the downside, it can get a little tedious doing a whole run-through. Tracks like Playing With Uranium feature a much rougher-cut Duran Duran with a desperate sounding Simon at the mic: Come on over to my place, playing with uranium / Reinvent the human race / You just got the invitation! As with their 1997 project, songs from this record still have some very strong hooks, though they may be encased in a difficultly depressing production that's as wet as it is ..sticky? Yeah, sticky. This record sounds like a hang-over and a state of intoxication at the very same time.
Hallucinating Elvis is an industrial Marilyn-Manson rip-off that's got some drugged-out, spacey vocals from LeBon and some hypnotic background music that's sporadically, just, weird. It does reach that insanity I heard on their last record, but it tries very difficult to get to that level. Even though LeBon's effectively tiring lyrics can grate on my last nerve, the song would be horrible without them; with the music on Pop Trash, everything kind of makes sense. You have to take it for what it is and realize that it's meant to be a challenging listen. The oddest thing about this album, for a fan at least, would be the rather unepic way it begins with a Medazza-esque guitar track called Someone Else Not Me. But shortly after it begins, the trippy, cracked-out sensation starts, and you just weren't expecting it. My personal track of choice is the broken ballad Pop Trash Movie, which features acoustic guitars reminiscent of Clapton. There's slight use of bongo-beats and sleigh bells in the background before expanding into this coldly powerful masterpiece: "I'm living in a pop trash movie / We star together in every scene / We'll all be famous for our fifteen minutes / Part of a celluloid dream." Simon screeches in pain during parts of the verse, and he sounds like he's dying-- not annoying...effective.
The catchy hooks Duran Duran is known for didn't disappear on this record; you just have to keep your ears open. There are some killer musical flourishes from each band member, and I'd have to say I'm an advocate for their darker Warren-years. The dance-rock Mars Meets Venus sounds like a Nine Inch Nails, and should make Trent Reznor eat his heart out. Simon's vocals are little irksome during the verses because they don't sound particularly convincing, but the instrumentation is intense electronica that's effective and flat-out badass: "Someone iiiiiiissss perfect for yooou.." It's got a great hook, and it's a highlight of Side B, as is the updated-rockabilly ballad The Sun Doesn't Shine Forever, featuring stupendous vocals from Simon and a twangy, dark production that sounds like the calm after the storm. The use of Buggles-esque synth chord samples offers a weird juxtaposition, and it's a little difficult to describe if you don't hear it. It's an electrified Richard Hawley song, I suppose. The band was in a weird place with this record, but I'd have to say that they successfully mixed industrial depth with pop fluff, creatively burying their hooks beneath a layer of strung-out production: "You and I got to hold to together, cause in this life...maybe the sun doesn't shine forever..."
VERDICT
It might be a little difficult to pick up in a store, but it needs to be heard in some way or another. Out of every Duran Duran album, this is not the one that deserves to be shunned. Open your ears (and your wallets) and take a heavy dose of the "decadent" side of one of the more innovative musical acts. This record, along with Medazzaland and Astronaut prove to me that Duran Duran is not a piece of 80s novelty. They are artists. And with that, I close the book on Duran Duran. It's been a fantastic week.
01. Someone Else Like Me [4.5 Stars]
02. Lava Lamp [5 Stars]
03. Playing With Uranium [5 Stars]
04. Hallucinating Elvis [5 Stars]
05. Starting to Remember [4 Stars]
06. Pop Trash Movie [5 Stars
07. Fragment (Interlude) [--]
08. Mars Meets Venus [4.5 Stars]
09. Lady Xanax [4 Stars]
10. The Sun Doesn't Shine Forever [5 Stars]
11. Kiss Goodbye (Interlude) [--]
12. The Last Day on Earth [4 Stars]
SCORE: 5 STARS (4.6+ )
http://www.epinions.com/review/musc_mu- ... 83300?sb=1