ALABAMA SHAKES – American Dream: TRACK OF THE MONTH

Not many tunes in this Rewind, just because nothing will get written and finished – again – so we have no actual words on cool new sounds like the noisy new mclusky EP or Dublin noisy bastards Bucket or Massive Attack with Tom Waits – but then again, Boots on the Ground is too intense to put words to anyway, like Terrace Martin’s Pig Feet. Sobering stuff, mandatory viewing. The shock of the news.

OK, before we get to Alabama, we’ve got another big A to check. Attack of the killer As? YES. You know who.

ANTHRAX – It’s for the Kids

Anthrax are BACK, on fire at speed. It’s for the Kids is a pristine crack of thrash whiplash which shows they can still cut very sharp (how does Charlie Benante do it? Phenomenal). Nothing radical innovation-wise here obviously, just all your old fave ‘thrax bits (chugs and speeds, hooks and leads) tastefully done in exactly the right ways at exactly the right times with a shit-ton of energy. Pure old-school joy. There’s even an Indians-themed wardance breakdown, FFS. Thrashers’ delight.

But it’s the Madhouse-homage video that triggers a full-on blur of old and new and it’s a sweet touch. If you saw the Madhouse clip over and over and over, as a kid 40 years ago, It’s for the Kids is the best triggering experience of your week, guaranteed. All those deep memories you never knew you had – drools, straightjackets, grins, gurns, pliers, hi tops, headbanging freeze frames – come bubbling up immediately, so much that you have to check the Madhouse original. A good-times double whammy. And Joey Belladonna still seems to appear from nowhere at the start.

ALABAMA SHAKES – American Dream

Allow us a Led Zeppelin divergence, just for a minute. Just for the slow blues.

Since I’ve Been Loving You tends to be cited as a Led Zeppelin blues meisterwork – and maybe it is, if you’re a blues-er. If you’re not then Loving You’s histrionic take on trad-blues can be a bit much, perhaps made more palatable by context (side one, Led Zeppelin III) or live status (The Song Remains the Same).

But Tea for One has always been the Zep blues benchmark for me. Tea for One kills: a near 10-minute downer that chokes time and slows it right the fuck down, not just because of the tempo-dragging triple-time but because that’s what the song is about – time. Stretched over one of John Bonham’s tastiest drum performances, Tea for One tackles a human condition and its desperate frustration could only ever find a home on the darkly intense Presence. It’s not Led Zeppelin playing the blues, it’s Led Zeppelin feeling despair. And the music is at one with that. There is no flash.

American Dream by Alabama Shakes has the same, deliberate, time-warping power. Stripped down, sparse and very much not afraid to use space/ambience as a lead instrument, its downbeat lack of pace mesmerises. But instead of a blues-ish backdrop, we get psyche-soul and gospel power. For any non-Alabama Shakes devotees – like me, familiar only with past singles – this track is a heavy duty revelation, dripping with Curtis Harding funk, Algiers fire and masterful restraint. When the band drops out to leave a seductive drum shuffle, it snaps your attention. You can feel the echoes of instruments stopped. There is presence

which is kinda where we came in. Stunning. Check American Dream right here.

And that’s it for this month.

’til next time!

Monthly rewind
The monthly music rewind

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