Rock/Pop
LPレコード

Dodge And Burn

0.0

販売価格

¥
4,390
税込
還元ポイント

在庫状況 について

フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2015年09月25日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルADA
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 1354702102
SKU 813547021021

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
It took the Dead Weather two years to make and release Dodge and Burn, with the bandmembers recording whenever they had time to play together and issuing several songs as singles through Third Man's subscription service, The Vault. Despite these fragmented origins, this is the Dead Weather's most satisfying and engaging album, with everything that was good about their previous music getting a shot of adrenaline. The charged opening track, "I Feel Love (Every Million Miles)," is the first sign that things are a little different this time, with the spare swagger of '70s metal and boogie rock providing a platform for some of Dean Fertita's most unhinged guitar playing and some of Alison Mosshart's wildest vocals. If there's any question that Mosshart is a great singer, Dodge and Burn puts it to rest; throughout the album, she uses her ability to be tough, vulnerable, and sexy -- often at the same time -- to perfection. The way she snarls "I'm a bad man" on the glowering "Let Me Through" is scarier, and more compelling, than if any of her male bandmates had sung it. Meanwhile, "Three Dollar Hat," one of Jack White's few lead vocal turns, is a hip-hop-tinged tale of revenge that reaffirms he's always been more than a by-the-book revivalist. Elsewhere, the album's loose, try-anything feel honors the band's roots in impromptu jam sessions, whether it's Jack Lawrence's creeping bassline on "Buzzkill(er)" or the organ on "Lose the Right," which falls somewhere between dub and vintage horror movie music. However, the Dead Weather don't just rely on chemistry and chops -- Dodge and Burn also boasts some of their best-written songs. With its stark riffs and dense paranoia, "Open Up" rivals the best work from any of White's other projects, while "Mile Markers"' layered menace and sensuality make it a standout. There's a seedy, predatory undercurrent to songs like "Be Still," "Cop and Go," and "Too Bad" that suggests the album could be the soundtrack to a gritty crime drama, with the gloriously melodramatic ballad "Impossible Winner" (which may be an even better showcase for Mosshart's sentimental side than the Kills' "The Last Goodbye") playing as the credits roll. Perhaps the first time the Dead Weather have truly lived up to their promise, Dodge and Burn is a joyride of an album -- sexy, fun, and dangerous, it upholds the tenets of rock & roll. ~ Heather Phares

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      I Feel Love (Every Million Miles)
    2. 2.
      Buzzkill (Er)
    3. 3.
      Let Me Through
    4. 4.
      Three Dollar Hat
    5. 5.
      Lose the Right
    6. 6.
      Rough Detective
    7. 7.
      Open Up
    8. 8.
      Be Still
    9. 9.
      Mile Markers
    10. 10.
      Cop and Go
    11. 11.
      Too Bad
    12. 12.
      Impossible Winner

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: The Dead Weather

商品の紹介

Spin - "[Mosshart] is the impossible winner, and the star of an outfit whose members are hardly content to rest on their past achievements. DODGE AND BURN is one of their greatest." NME (Magazine) - "[Mosshart] deserves credit for enlivening tracks like `Cop And Go' and `Rough Detective', the latter of which sees her taking part in a twisted call-and-response interrogation by White's titular lawman." Pitchfork (Website) - "Theirs is a blues defined not by chord progressions but physical reactions, embodying the music's storied tradition of howls and moans and demonic possession into a fierce, physical sound." Clash (Magazine) - "''I Feel Love (Every Million Miles)' is classic Dead Weather. A Led Zep-indebted groove proceeds over some pretty impressive drum work from Mr. White while Allison Mosshart only solidifies the transition she's made from underground indie goddess to one of the most exciting singers out there."
Rovi

It took the Dead Weather two years to make and release Dodge and Burn, with the bandmembers recording whenever they had time to play together and issuing several songs as singles through Third Man's subscription service, The Vault. Despite these fragmented origins, this is the Dead Weather's most satisfying and engaging album, with everything that was good about their previous music getting a shot of adrenaline. The charged opening track, "I Feel Love (Every Million Miles)," is the first sign that things are a little different this time, with the spare swagger of '70s metal and boogie rock providing a platform for some of Dean Fertita's most unhinged guitar playing and some of Alison Mosshart's wildest vocals. If there's any question that Mosshart is a great singer, Dodge and Burn puts it to rest; throughout the album, she uses her ability to be tough, vulnerable, and sexy -- often at the same time -- to perfection. The way she snarls "I'm a bad man" on the glowering "Let Me Through" is scarier, and more compelling, than if any of her male bandmates had sung it. Meanwhile, "Three Dollar Hat," one of Jack White's few lead vocal turns, is a hip-hop-tinged tale of revenge that reaffirms he's always been more than a by-the-book revivalist. Elsewhere, the album's loose, try-anything feel honors the band's roots in impromptu jam sessions, whether it's Jack Lawrence's creeping bassline on "Buzzkill(er)" or the organ on "Lose the Right," which falls somewhere between dub and vintage horror movie music. However, the Dead Weather don't just rely on chemistry and chops -- Dodge and Burn also boasts some of their best-written songs. With its stark riffs and dense paranoia, "Open Up" rivals the best work from any of White's other projects, while "Mile Markers"' layered menace and sensuality make it a standout. There's a seedy, predatory undercurrent to songs like "Be Still," "Cop and Go," and "Too Bad" that suggests the album could be the soundtrack to a gritty crime drama, with the gloriously melodramatic ballad "Impossible Winner" (which may be an even better showcase for Mosshart's sentimental side than the Kills' "The Last Goodbye") playing as the credits roll. Perhaps the first time the Dead Weather have truly lived up to their promise, Dodge and Burn is a joyride of an album -- sexy, fun, and dangerous, it upholds the tenets of rock & roll. ~ Heather Phares
Rovi

レッド・ツェッペリンやブラック・サバスといった70年代の英国ハード・ロックに対する愛を炸裂させながら、実は毎回、変貌を遂げてきたデッド・ウェザー。この3作目でジャック・ホワイトと仲間たちが印象付けるのは、成熟と洗練である。混沌とした前2作に比べると格段に聴きやすい。レゲエに加え、ジャックがラップするヒップホップ風の曲も登場する。そして締め括りはアリソンの歌声の魅力が際立ったバラードだ。
bounce (C)山口智男
タワーレコード(vol.384(2015年10月25日発行号)掲載)

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