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Boom Box
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Boom Box
Current price: $20.99
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Barnes and Noble
Boom Box
Current price: $20.99
Size: CD
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They may have been punk, but it's all in the past; on
Boom Box
,
Beatsteaks
play raw rock with a catchy edge that suggests
the White Stripes
, but rooted in old hard rock with a no-nonsense facelift. A couple of tunes do offer the good old frantic speed, simple riffs, and singalong choruses -- and on "Bullets from Another Dimension," a title worthy of
Misfits
to boot -- but that's just one dish on the menu. Several other songs, for instance, sport reggae-ish rhythms along with punkish guitars, so it's sorta like ska without a horn section; again, not an unusual route for a punk band to take (just think
Blue Hearts
). Those tunes, however, have more identity than a regular stylistic experiment -- "Automatic," for example, comes with hypnotically droning guitar textures that are, indeed, somewhat mechanical, but deliberately so, and to good effect. Some other numbers are just energetic, unpolished alt-rock blasters -- to talk of
Jack
and
Meg White
, or, in case of the opener, a very rough take on
the Smiths
' legacy -- but "Under a Clear Blue Sky" and "House on Fire" sound too melodic for that, rather like '80s rock if you can imagine it being non-cheesy. That's a tall order, true, but
pull it off, since they only dabble in other styles because they're rebellious enough to do so, and who's to stop them? The bandmembers never lose track of their own sound -- straightforward, no-frills, gritty rock -- and if they sometimes neglect catchiness, they make up for it with the dirty power of a mud-racing monster truck, cranking out a delightfully rowdy, gripping record in the process. ~ Alexey Eremenko
Boom Box
,
Beatsteaks
play raw rock with a catchy edge that suggests
the White Stripes
, but rooted in old hard rock with a no-nonsense facelift. A couple of tunes do offer the good old frantic speed, simple riffs, and singalong choruses -- and on "Bullets from Another Dimension," a title worthy of
Misfits
to boot -- but that's just one dish on the menu. Several other songs, for instance, sport reggae-ish rhythms along with punkish guitars, so it's sorta like ska without a horn section; again, not an unusual route for a punk band to take (just think
Blue Hearts
). Those tunes, however, have more identity than a regular stylistic experiment -- "Automatic," for example, comes with hypnotically droning guitar textures that are, indeed, somewhat mechanical, but deliberately so, and to good effect. Some other numbers are just energetic, unpolished alt-rock blasters -- to talk of
Jack
and
Meg White
, or, in case of the opener, a very rough take on
the Smiths
' legacy -- but "Under a Clear Blue Sky" and "House on Fire" sound too melodic for that, rather like '80s rock if you can imagine it being non-cheesy. That's a tall order, true, but
pull it off, since they only dabble in other styles because they're rebellious enough to do so, and who's to stop them? The bandmembers never lose track of their own sound -- straightforward, no-frills, gritty rock -- and if they sometimes neglect catchiness, they make up for it with the dirty power of a mud-racing monster truck, cranking out a delightfully rowdy, gripping record in the process. ~ Alexey Eremenko