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Dandy
Warhols: The Thinking Man's Pop
by R A Miller
Dandy Warhols
Welcome to the Monkey House
Capitol, 2003
Pick
this up!
The Dandy Warhols
have always been a riddle inside an enigma wrapped up in a paradox. Radio-friendly
Warhols tunes feature sing-along hooks and show up everywhere from soundtracks
to TV ads.
Funny thing is, most of the band's material trends toward brooding indie-rock
fare (definitely not radio friendly), and the lyrics behind those catchy
pop songs? Well, listen closely cuz you're probably reiterating Courtney
Taylor-Taylor's sarcastic assaults on anything and everything hipster
chic as you belt it out into your shower head.
Case in point: the band's first hit single "Not If You Were the Last
Junkie on Earth"or any line from Thirteen Tales From Urban Bohemia's
"Bohemian Like You."
Now take a look at the band. Size 'em up. The four members combined weigh
in around 500 pounds fully pierced out. Their publicity photo subtly features
a nuclear reactor as a centerpiece while three of the four (guitarist
Loew, drummer DeBoer, and Taylor-Taylor) don skin-tight retro concert
shirts supporting The Clash, Bob Dylan, and The Pretenders. Could you
airlift any one of them to New York's Bowery District or San Fran's South
of Market or Boston's Central Square and watch them blend with the fauna?
Let's just say you'd be pretty safe from an EPA inquiry
So the Dandy's are a bunch of hypocrites then
Well, not exactly.
They're simply smart enough to know how to laugh at themselves and anyone
else in the hipster genus that starts taking themselves to seriously.
Philosophically this band more resembles the Pixies or Imperial Teen than
say a wanna-be-indie Third Eye Blind. And that's definitely not a bad
thing. The question is, can the Dandys be too smart for their own good?
The new album is Welcome to the Monkey House, and with it the band
ventures further into the realm of big production and synthesized power
pop - probably an unavoidable direction considering they enlisted help
from Tony Visconti (David Bowie) and Nick Rhodes (Duran Duran) for the
knob-twisting duties. The only unpleasant surprise may be the arrangement:
Where Come Down and Thirteen Tales blend to provide mural
of sound, Monkey House is more stilted - each song more independent.
Despite the rough arrangement, Monkey House provides Dandy fans
new and old enough high points to warrant accolades. "We Used to
Be Friends," "Plan A, Scientist," and "The Last High"
will fuel radio play lists for a while, and "Insincere" and
"Burned" keep the wandering tonal drippings alive.
Dandy Warhols
Welcome to the Monkey House
Capitol, 2003
Pick
this up!
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