aah see the reason the first is my favourite is that it’s so bluesy

to me, it’s the borderline between the blues rock that all the other classic rock bands were making and the heavy metal that we know and love today

Led Zep took many aspects of the blues and then pushed them about as far as they could go (to the point of it being fairly ridiculous)

the first Sabbath album is the sound of a blues band pushing things so far it distorts into something that’s totally new

anyway I have an interview tomorrow so Sabbath HGATR had better not be earlier than Wednesday :smiley:

2 Likes

great post, cheers

they’ve never really clicked for me despite being a big name in a scene I love but I think I’ve only listened to a few songs

will check out their various phases this week!

1 Like

Glad to be of service :slight_smile:

They’re one of those bands where you’ll be hard pushed to find fan consensus on their best album, or even their best song. Makes for an inconsistent live show (they’re always on top form, but the setlists can be all over the place as they try to please everyone) but if you listen to, say, The Artist In The Ambulance and write it off as “of-its-time” screamo (which wouldn’t be an unreasonable conclusion) then you don’t have to look further into the future for something completely different.

1 Like

Excellent post. Nice to see such a deep dive of Thrice. They are genuinely a special band, reaching outside screamo and being so successful in so many of their experiments. I even think Beggars, which they released quite late in their career and has pretty much no screamo elements, is my absolute favourite of theirs, because the songwriting and lyrics are phenomenal.

Do you think they had periods of producing good material, then bad material, and then good material though? I think the quality of their material, since The Artist in the Ambulance at least, has been consistently and commendably high.

1 Like

I do. I found the alchemy index borderline-unlistenable at the time. I’m definitely overdue a reappraisal of those albums, but they’re always the low spots of the live set for me.

Beggars has some of their best songs, but for me the 2 most recent albums are the best of their career.

I do wish they were a more interesting band to cover, from a journalistic standpoint. I’ve had the pleasure of chatting to them a couple of times and unless you want to go in-depth on the muso side, there’s really very little to pull on there. 4 nice guys who are very good at their instruments, writing criminally underrated songs.

I interviewed them on the To Be Everywhere cycle and trying to get insights out of them was like trying to get blood from a stone. I think that’s really played against them historically. They’re not a “fun” band to cover.

1 Like

Gets tricky judging this once an artist has had a long career with ups and downs or maybe albums where your personal opinion doesn’t chime with general critical consensus.

Noticed The Flaming Lips have announced a new album - early stuff is all over the place, had a brilliant run then lost it with Mystics, regained with Embryonic, then generally lost again with side projects and Oczy (which I don’t actually think is terrible, just terrible in parts). But I don’t know maybe the sheer mess of the discography is all part of it anyway.

1 Like

Wire. I love the classic first three but got very lost in their 80s output. I have enjoyed their last few records a lot though.

2 Likes

Interpol. Started strong, faded and I think el pintor is good again. Personally I didn’t really dig marauder but I think that it was well thought of.

I’m not sure Underworld releasing one shit album (barking) means they completely lost it. Given its a collaboration album as well. I think they’ve been pretty consistent across their career tbh.

I would definitely hold up Wire’s later records up to their earlier and (rightly) well-regarded stuff.

It’s completely different (to their credit), but still experimental and furious.

What a band.

1 Like

Weezer had it, had it, kinda had it, kinda had it, lost it, kinda had it, vapourised it, lost the vapour, recrystalised it for a lesser yield, had it again, lost it again -->

1 Like

American Football from LP 1 to LP 2 to LP 3

6 Likes

Great shout, love LP3 so much

2 Likes

Simplified it for ya

2 Likes

I’m praying that Placebo find it again. We should know soon enough :grimacing: :crossed_fingers:

Jonny Cash must be the best example of this

1 Like

Deaf Havana and Enter Shikari? I wouldn’t hold your breath…

1 Like

Can’t say I fully understand your implication. But I can say, if you aren’t already aware, Reynold (new label Exec) says he’s already heard the new tracks and loved em. Given this, don’t think it’s too far off :wink:

Oh, implication is just that I think both of those bands are terrible :grin:

2 Likes

Got it :blush:

No idea what to expect. Just ready to hear something new :man_shrugging:

1 Like