
Rating:
Buy it from Insound
Download it from Emusic
Digg this article
Add to del.icio.usAs far back as 1997, the hyperactive music press had been awaiting Underworld's followup to the brilliant Second Toughest in the Infants, or more specifically the Trainspotting epic, "Born Slippy," released like a boogie board on the crest of the electronica wave. Finally, after settling on the ridiculous title Beaucoup Fish, Underworld have finally answered. And it shouldn't surprise anyone in today's age of shattered expectations that Beaucoup Fish is not as great as we'd hoped. But, of course, what we had hoped for was the OK Computer of electronic music. Lofty. The final product lies more like The Bends of house music.
My legs and ass must admit that Underworld that can make me dance. Anyone who knows me, realizes the grand scale of this accomplishment. I have the rhythm of a poodle on his hind legs, begging for a milkbone. Jungle junkies looking for seizure beats and caffeinated tempos look elsewhere. Go pick up some Autechre or Squarepusher. Beaucoup Fish's thump comes direct and in repetition, a 50/50 mix of ambient synthphonies and thudding digital funk with a splash of rock and roll. Actually, Beaucoup Fish succeeds most when miming rock. "Push Upstairs," built on a pounding piano loop, could be a Girls Against Boys number, if GVSB completely got rid of stringed instruments. A pal o' mine complains that "Bruce Lee" sounds like the opening to a Thriller-era Michael Jackson tune. Well, yeah. That's why it's cool.
Unlike other techno groups, Underworld relies heavily on vocals. And a vocoder effect. Lots of vocoder effect. Although, the vocoder might just be covering up some downright silly lyrics. Underworld loves to chant a pastiche of commercial slogans, colors, consumer vocabulary, and whatever words they just think sound cool. Sometimes this works. And when it doesn't, you're stuck with lines like "King of snake/ King of snake/ King of snake/ King of snake." I'm not positive, but the lyrics for "Bruce Lee" might be built on the repetition of "Life is/ Juice from a box/ Bruce Lee." Underworld, being artists and designers, might try to label this "a postmodern commentary on the accursed share of capitalist dogma." Don't believe the hype.
Beaucoup Fish has no meaning in daylight and sobriety. Underworld have crafted a deeply agoraphobic record that demands the ambience of neon-lit city streets, the backseat of a boxy Japanese import, or the flesh-pressed dancefloor of a clubs with names like Fuse, Fix, Flux, Fax and Flick. Beaucoup Fish is a record for quantum body activity-- either let your body completely relax or completely move. As shallow as it sounds, Underworld are just sound cool and sexy. They're as inexplicably addictive as fashion, and just as inexplicably disposable. But isn't that what makes us like them?
- Vampire Weekend Vampire Weekend
- Radiohead In Rainbows [CD 2]
- Jonny Greenwood There Will Be Blood OST
- The Mars Volta The Bedlam in Goliath
- Radiohead In Rainbows
- Cat Power Jukebox
- The Magnetic Fields Distortion
- Times New Viking Rip It Off
- Hot Chip Made in the Dark
- Beach House Devotion
- British Sea Power Do You Like Rock Music?
- Atlas Sound Let the Blind Lead Those Who Can See But
- Fleet Foxes Sun Giant EP
- Beck Odelay: Deluxe Edition
- Michael Jackson Thriller: 25th Anniversary Edition
- The Simpsons Testify
- Hercules and Love Affair Hercules and Love Affair
- High Places 03/07 – 09/07
- Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks Real Emotional Trash
- Andrew Bird Soldier On EP
- Xiu Xiu Women as Lovers
- Fuck Buttons Street Horrrsing
- El Guincho Alegranza!
- Black Mountain In the Future
- The Mountain Goats Heretic Pride
- Nine Inch Nails Y34RZ3R0R3M1X3D
- Lupe Fiasco The Cool
- The Ruby Suns Sea Lion
- Goldfrapp Seventh Tree
- Los Campesinos! Hold on Now, Youngster...
- Drive-By Truckers Brighter Than Creation's Dark
- The Raveonettes Lust Lust Lust
- Morrissey Greatest Hits
- Neon Neon Stainless Style
- Daft Punk Alive 2007
- Rivers Cuomo Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo
- Why? Alopecia
- Burial Untrue
- The Honeydrips Here Comes the Future
- Jason Collett Here's to Being Here
Measured over the past 3 months (Last update: 3/25/2008)


Related Reviews & Features
