Album Review: Wild Beasts, "Smother"

Wild Beasts is one of those bands that draw an embarrassing amount of adulatory adjectives from music critics and is regularly tipped for the top. Their richly textured and distinctive art-rock/dream-pop sound is both complex and distinctive, and therefore ideal fodder for music critics to signal a little sophistication. 

But it's a well-known fact that Joe Public likes simpler fare and a more "laddish" vocal than lead singer Hayden Thorpe is capable of. Accordingly the Cumbrian quartet's third excellent studio album will garner the usual nods of appreciation from the musical cognoscenti but go largely unnoticed by the wider masses. 

The delicate, yearning evocation of Invisible and the lush, smouldering feel of Burning evoke comparisons with adult pop legends The Blue Nile, but with a shimmering range of rhythms. 

Thorpe's vocal is the key. On songs like Loop the Loop and the aptly named closer End Come Too Soon Thorpe shamelessly deploys his swooning, swooping operatic countertenor to prove once again that the voice can be the most expressive instrument. 


C.B.Liddell
Metropolis
23rd May, 2011
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