|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Biography |
|
|
|
|
Incubus
scored a multi-format radio smash and mass success in 2001 with the lilting,
sing-along "Drive," |
which
hit #1 on Modern Rock charts and also landed in the uppermost reaches of the
Top 40. But the band's |
core
fans will be stoked that their new album, A Crow Left Of The Murder, kicks
like a mule. |
|
Lead-off track
"Megalomaniac" sets the tone for a reaffirmation of the hard-rock
thrust that is key to the Incubus |
sound. After an exquisite build-up of
instrumental tension, the song unleashes the kind of riffage that rises from |
the sea breathing fire and lays waste to
Tokyo. This gives way momentarily to a spare verse pulsing with intimations |
of electronic menace then singer Brandon
Boyd hurls his urgent invective: "Hey megalomaniac, you're no Jesus/ |
Yeah,
you're no fucking Elvis/ Wash your hands clean of yourself baby/ And step
down, step down, step down." |
|
The
"Megalomaniac" video, shot by acclaimed director Floria Sigismondi,
illustrates the cut's potential for political |
protest,
but the political is impossible to separate from the personal in much of A
Crow Left Of The Murder |
(released
Feb. 3) In "Pistola," another bad-ass outing (and Lollapalooza
crowd favorite), Boyd states explicitly: |
My
pen is a pistola
a patriot's weapon of choice. "Talk Shows On
Mute," with its invocation of Orwell's "1984," |
and
"Made For T.V. Movie" which manages to recall both The Beatles
and Alice In Chains simmer with social |
commentary.
But songs like "Agoraphobia" (boasting a huge pop chorus),
"Beware! Criminal" and the driving "Leech" |
are
more intimate explorations, more reflections of interpersonal agendas than
global ones. |
|
There's no doubt
from the sound and fury of A Crow Left Of The Murder that Boyd frequently
singled out among |
his generation of rock songwriters as a
model of positivity is pissed off. And it's not just war and injustice and
man's |
general
inhumanity to man that's likely got him down. Perhaps the thematic tone of
"Priceless" (which finds |
guitarist
Mike Einziger channeling Primus' Larry LaLonde) and the swinging, hook-heavy
indictment of materialism |
called
"Zee Deveel" indicate that Incubus has been in the game long enough
to face some measure of disillusionment. |
|
It
seems reasonable to assume that in 1991, when Boyd, Einziger, drummer Jose
Pasillas and original bassist |
Dirk
Lance (Ben Kenney joined in 2003 upon Lance's departure) began Incubus as
high school sophomores in the |
San Fernando
Valley outpost of Calabasas, they coveted the trappings of rock stardom. But
maybe, now that they've |
attained some of these prizes, a heightened
awareness of their position and its treacheries has begun to bubble up. |
|
After
all, Boyd and company have double-platinum plaques for 1999's Make Yourself,
home to the breakthrough, Top 10 |
hit
"Pardon Me," as well as airplay champs "Stellar" and the
aforementioned "Drive," and 2001's Morning View, which |
debuted
at #2 on the Billboard 200 and introduced such radio staples as "I Wish
You Were Here" (#2) "Warning" (#3) |
and
"Nice To Know You" (#9). And Incubus is one of the very few acts
who can claim to have toured with Ozzfest and |
Family
Values but also with Moby's Area: One, presumably hobnobbing along the way
with more than a few admired |
peers
and a handful of boyhood idols. Moreover, the band has managed to remain
interesting for more than a decade, |
praised
by critics for rampant experimentation amid all the melodic crowd-pleasing.
And yet, the world is still a very |
fucked-up
place, and the people who once seemed to be "keeping it real" just
aren't. |
|
But
Incubus has never been a one-note band, and Boyd has never been a one-mood
writer. Despite the anger and |
outrage,
a palpable sense of catharsis and even triumph pervades A Crow Left Of The
Murder "Yeah, I'm down, but |
not
out/ And far from done," Boyd promises on "Beware! Criminal."
Nor is the disc without its spiritual musing and |
tender
moments. The title track gallops along an adventurous aural pathway espousing
a Zen-like embrace of experience |
for
experience's sake; "Here In My Room" is a lovely, hushed ballad,
with Boyd confiding: "If the world were to fall apart/ |
In
a fiction-worthy wind/ I wouldn't change a thing/ Now that you're here/ Love
is a verb/ Here in my room"; "Smile Lines" |
finds
him so crushed out he swears, "High school never ends"; and
"Southern Girl" transmits the abandon of new love, |
the
singer telling the object of his affection, "Look no further/ I am
yours." |
|
As
a singer, Boyd reaches heretofore unimagined heights of vocal dexterity on A
Crow Left Of The Murder. His signature |
syncopated
phrasing remains intact clearly, the heart of a beat poet beats in the
heart of Brandon Boyd but he has |
jettisoned
some of his talk-singing for pure falsetto flight, deftly punctuating his
delivery with these disarming departures. |
Bassist
Ben Kenney, who during his many years with The Roots longed to rock, also
opens it up on Crow. The thunder |
of
"Megalomaniac," in particular, bears his stamp, as do (among
others) "Pistola," "Smile Lines" and the epic |
thrash-o-rama
"Sick, Sad Little World," wherein Einziger also waxes virtuosic,
conjuring Hendrix in a lengthy, satisfying solo. |
|
That
jam is emblematic of the fearless creative energy, uncanny sense of dynamics
and high-wire eclecticism that Incubus |
pumps
into all 58-odd minutes of A Crow Left Of The Murder: There's a dub
breakdown; a bit of wah-wah guitar played |
through
a Leslie speaker cabinet; a jungle interlude where the snare and high-hat
groove like Memphis; some intricate, |
jazzy
drumming finessed, mind you, while Pasillas is preventing the whole thing
from spinning out of control and |
then Einziger's
fabulously freaky guitar workout. |
|
Harnessing
this unbridled artistry was producer Brendan O'Brien, who pushed Incubus'
fondness for unearthly washes of |
distortion
not to mention beeps, whirs, squidges and other assorted robot noises to
11. Which isn't to say that Crow |
sounds
like it was made by robots; it sounds like it was recorded in the factory
where they make the robots, though the |
swooping
cello part on "Here In My Room" orchestrated by Incubus cohort Suzy
Katayama tempers this a bit, along with |
the
organic accents like tambourine and handclaps heard throughout the record. |
|
This
tapestry of texture is perforated by a seemingly endless array of surging
guitar theatrics, explosive drumming, beefy |
basslines,
sturdy collaborative songcraft and Boyd's consistently insistent vocal
performances. It's Incubus, only more so. |
Some may view the
intensity of A Crow Left Of The Murder exemplified by the Top 10
"Megalomaniac" as a sonic |
response to the mellow vibe of
"Drive." Others may consider the band's renewed ferocity a reaction
to the mixed bag of |
stardom.
But Incubus' many rabid fans won't give a shit; they'll just be happy their
heroes are still cranking out the |
post-modern
head-bangers that made them rabid fans in the first place. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|