Eels – ‘Extreme Witchcraft’ album review: dispatches for current times

This time, the whole world is living the new Eels album. Generally, dispatches from LA’s most careworn alt-pop outfit have acted as windows on the turbulent, nose to the romantic grindstone life of Mark ‘E’ Everett – 2020’s ‘Earth To Dora’ traced the parabolic rise and fall of a relationship in full, shortly after Everett’s second divorce. ‘Extreme Witchcraft’, however, is set in the uncertain hinterland following a major life upheaval, finding E a little lost and unsure of himself. A track like ‘Learning While I Lose’ might be the most personal of outpourings, but lines like “Yesterday’s another day/I wish it’d gone another way/Now today I’m trying to see just what’s ahead for me” could be printed on a magnet and stuck to the fridge of 2022. It certainly doesn’t sound like an album recorded remotely in collaboration with PJ Harvey foil John Parish, with E adding his parts at 4am while trying not to wake his son. The first half of the record throws back somewhat to the pair’s last collab on 2001’s abrasive ‘Souljacker’ – fuzzed up retro garage rock dominates the opening run of ‘Amateur Hour’ and ‘Good Night On Earth’. ‘Nuggets’ is speckled with psychedelia and trademark E self-deprecation, and hosts an extremely belated kiss-off to Colin Firth for delivering the line “I can’t stand Eels” in Love, Actually. A tone of post-traumatic optimism is struck: ‘Strawberries And Popcorn’ lauds the benefits of being a post-divorce slob: eating junk dinners in your pants with “nobody here to pester me”. Another relatable image, in this brave new world of working from home. However, like its centrepiece ‘Stumbling Bee’ – a piece of cranky, throwaway jazz pop about feeling aimless – the record loses direction as it ventures away from its invigorating garage rock and Motown opening. ‘Grandfather Clock Strikes Twelve’ mashes hip-hop, classic funk, vocoder backing vocals and a frank depiction of steamy parent sex (“Lock the door, we’re on the floor, the starving will be fed”) into something resembling a divorcee Prince, but the funk and jazz touches of ‘So Anyway’ and ‘I Know You’re Right’ slow the record to a dispiriting crawl. More uplifting is the handclap country folk ditty ‘Learning While I Lose’, and the uncharacteristically confident bar rocker ‘The Magic’. “Try me,” E spiels, sidling seductively up to a stranger. Spoiler: she doesn’t. Meanwhile, schizophrenic incel anthem ‘What It Isn’t’ flicks from serene Beach Boys twinkling to furious brass punk as E finally cracks in the face of another goddamn rejection. It’s the most adventurous moment on a record of fluctuating magic. Rather than a fresh blast of wizardry, ‘Extreme Witchcraft’ is more of a feet-finder for our times. DETAILS Release date: January 28 Release label: PIAS/E Works Records The post Eels – ‘Extreme Witchcraft’ album review: dispatches for current times appeared first on NME.

zum Artikel gehen

Eels share rousing new track ‘Amateur Hour’

Eels have shared a new single from their upcoming 14th studio album – listen to ‘Amateur Hour’ below. READ MORE: Eels on album ‘Earth To Dora’: “Dark phases happen, but they will get better” The band announ

zum Artikel gehen

Listen to Eels’ Garage-Rock Fueled ‘The Magic’

Eels just unveiled yet another track off their forthcoming fourteenth studio album. The eccentric rockers released “The Magic.” Following the galactic jaunt “Good Night On Earth” and the smooth cruise of “Steam Engine,&rdquo

zum Artikel gehen

News: Clipshow mit PSYCHEDELIC WITCHCRAFT, FIRESPAWN, GWAR & SERENITY

Die Florenzer PSYCHEDELIC WITCHCRAFT veröffentlichen nächsten Freitag ihr neues Album Sound of the wind . Darauf enthalten der Song Rising On The Edge , zu dem ihr jetzt das Video sehen könnt: So einfach kann es sein, FIRESPAWN zu ihrem neuen Video

zum Artikel gehen

Rare cassette tape of Prince’s ‘The Black Album’ goes up for auction

A rare promo cassette tape of Prince‘s ‘The Black Album’ has gone up for auction. The LP was originally intended to be released in December 1987 but after the late icon became convinced that the album was “evil”, he ordered i

zum Artikel gehen

Halsey Releases Extended Edition of If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power With Two New Songs

One of the biggest (and best) surprises of 2021 was Halsey‘s If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power. The album consisted of 14 songs written by the artist and was produced by none other than Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. If

zum Artikel gehen