Touch and Go
Over the past 10 years, Silkworm has released some pretty uniquealbums. Always abrasive while catchy, with odd lyrics and situations toread between the lines, they always bring it across with fervor andpassion. 'Italian Platinum' was again recorded with Steve Albini, andthe results are certainly Silkworm, but after ten years, the chinks inthe armor, or at least in this style, are starting to show. Yes, it's agood record. Yes, it would make your mother cover her ears (my mother,anyway). Yes, it's got great songs. But it's classic Silkworm. There'sless slower material this time out, and the guest vocals by Bloodshotartist Kelly Hogan add this album's freshness. But is it the bestSilkworm CD ever? Nope. Would you listen to it more than otherreleases? Nope. Would you love it just the same? Absolutely. The albumstarts of with '(I Hope U) Don't Survive', a song with the catchiestchorus I've heard in recent history ("And 'I love you' means 'I hopeyou don't survive' tonight"). And I dare say that's what's moststriking here, in that Silkworm is their catchiest on more than onesong, which could equate to them being more ((shudder)) "accessible."'The Brain', 'The Third', 'Dirty Air' and 'A Cockfight of Feelings' arepure pop splendor. 'Is She a Sign' and 'Young' are fantastic songs,ones that could easily cement the band's reputation as love songballadeers, if this were any other band than Silkworm. They never letit get that sappy, letting the guest vocalist shred the end of the songlike Marcy Mays on an Afghan Whigs number. And the ever-present storiesof drunkery are here again on 'White Lightning' and the fantastic'Bourbon Beard'. But overall, it's just another great Silkworm album.That's not a bad thing, but I keep waiting for something new to comeout of them. Something avant garde and noisy. Something defining. Andit's not here. But something tells me it's coming.

 

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