Everything new is old again with a rash of reunions among some of themore seminal bands in underground music, returning to eager audiencesno longer placated by the throngs of modern bands who wear theirinfluences all over their faces and not just on their sleeves. Spurredon by the critical and creative success of Wire's scorching millennialreleases, Boston's Mission of Burma decided they had more to say, inspite of twenty two years of inactivity and vocalist/guitarist RogerMiller's severe tinnitus. Though any attempt at recapturing the sparkof decade's past is a gamble, ONoffON sounds like it could have come just months after Burma's sole LP, 1982's Vs.The original members (with Bob Weston, replacing Martin Swope as theband's tape manipulator) demonstrate that they have not lost any of thestrength, verve, and creativity that define their early releases andthat the off time only deepened the maturity and intelligence that setsthem apart from their contemporaries. The slicing snarl of the guitarsat the opening of "The Setup" is a welcome sound, with the trademarkmetal on metal grinding signaling that Burma is ready to pick up rightwhere they left off. Indicative of this transition from then to now isthe inclusion of three previously unreleased Burma songs that have beenkicking around for twenty years, "Hunt Again," "Dirt," and "Playland."These tracks, until now only available on a compilation of outtakes,appear in much more searing versions, particularly "Playland," whichsqualls with fuzzy dissonance amidst Miller's abusive vocal delivery.Miller offers up some of the most incindeary songs of the album."Wounded World," is a swirling accusation with a tuneful, shoutedchorus that positions the song as an epic rallying cry, a call to armsthat begs raised voices to join in. Rivaling that force is PeterPrescott's "The Enthusiast," a barking, braying track with a relentlessriff, deep and full bodied. "What We Really Want," written by ClintConley in collaboration with poet Holly Anderson (who also lent hertalents to Vs's "Mica"), is a pensive, brooding track thatunderscores Burma's ability to craft an intense rocker that finds itsenergy not just in speed but in meaningful, expressive tension thatunfolds with care. Conley's contributions recall both his early songswith Burma and his more recent outings with his bandConsonant-intricately crafted and concerned with a poetic connectionbetween his words and music. Miller's "Falling" also captures thissensibility, retaining the rough edged sounds of Burma, but augmentingit with subdued acoustic guitar and an emphasis on the cerebral flairsboth musically and lyrically. Burma was never one for typical rockformulas, toying with things like dissonance, tonality, and songstructure to develop songs that were jarringly fresh and enticing. ONoffONis a remarkable record, standing just as tall as the rest of thecatalog and almost surely cementing Mission of Burma as a potent force,not just for their influence on today but for their new endeavors aswell.
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