In•ter A•li•a
Rise, 2017
Originally published at Apathy & Exhaustion
Having given it a try though, I can’t say that
the band aren’t attempting to meet me halfway when the record begins. Opening track ‘No Wolf Like the Present’ is
your obligatory 2017 number about stuff currently being tosh. Occupying coppers are in “open season” in
their “prowler cars”; peoples perspectives of history are taken and recycled
into cynical propaganda; knaves aren’t permitted to have even their kestrels (a
references to the source material of Kes,
which we recently learned was filmed at Tony’s first
high school in Yorkshire). But wasn’t it
ever thus? Arguably all that is
different now is the Potemkin mask of modern civilisation has slipped a little,
revealing the gruesome Predator face beneath. Recent interviews confirm the
band agrees.
More importantly, at least to me, is that the
song is a belter of a start to the album.
If you like this sort of thing at all you will likely have a good time
without knowing what is being said. The
vocabulary is probably one reason why I was only ever a mild fan of At The
Drive In (they’ve severed their hyphen here for whatever reason), but as far as
I can tell they’ve consciously picked up essentially where they left off in
2001. A big loud production of bold
elements all around, catchy guitars and percussion, topped off with
Bixler-Zavala’s enjoyably impressive pipes.
For better or worse, the eleven cuts mostly hit at one pace and tone
(clocking between 3:13 and 4:17), being similarly thick chocolate chunks that
make for a hefty post-hardcore protein bar.
Regardless of whether you’re the type of
person to draw pleasure from ATDI’s brand of obtuse wordplay, it’s nice to read
some of the lines just so you can sing along a bit, particularly during the
soaring chorus’s which have a tendency to rule.
There’s an undeniable musical nature to the vocals. As good as the instrumentation is on all the
tracks, these moments are the highlights of the album. They are some of the parts that have wormed
around in my head relentlessly when I’ve been trying to sleep, and that require
exclamation marks: “Brace yourself my
darling!” (‘Governed by Contagions’), “Phooooootograph/locked
up in the trance of a memo-memory!” (‘Incurably Innocent’), “And he’s always stealing flowers from my
stone, stone, stone/never once repaying that which he does oooooowe!”
(‘Call Broken Arrow’), “Church ain't
over, over!/'till they put the snakes back/put the snakes back/back in the bag”
(‘Holtzclaw’).
If you want any more than that from this word
salad you’ll have to use Plyrics or something, because the sleeve font is so
damn small that it’s illegible. It’s
like during the early/lazy days of CDs and tapes when labels would just squash
all the artwork from the larger medium on there, leaving you with four guys
who’d fit through the eye of a needle.
In this case the font is tiny on the vinyl too, so maybe it’s just a bad
decision designed to add to the layers of obscurity (I’m left to imagine what’s
going on with the cassette format).
That’s in stark contrast to the case art, which matches the music well,
being a gratifying cacophony of cityscape, chaos and hyenas. The style of longtime collaborator (and
former Trenchmouth singer) Damon Locks is really cool, and can be seen in the
‘Governed By Contagions’ and ‘Incurably Innocent’ videos as well. Locks also did the imagery for Relationship of Command with its Trojan
horses -- clearly a level of animal interest which fans of TNS Records should
admire. I’m inclined to be more
forgiving about the In•ter A•li•a artwork
being plastered on an absurd amount of merch.
Not to give the impression that I have a lot
of problems with the record, there are a couple of other elements that keep
this from being a complete killer. While
it’s not The Mars Volta or anything, the hooks aren’t always given the chance
to become hooks, veering off at inopportune times, which admittedly may have
been intentional knowing this lot.
‘Tilting at the Univender’ and ‘Pendulum in a Peasant Dress’ have these
weirdly edited momentum killing cascades in the chorus’s that take me
temporarily out of the songs. Some of
these weaker tracks being altered and surplus trimmed could have allowed for a
tad more variety in the arc of the album.
The exception to that issue is ‘Ghost-Tape No. 9’, slotted in at number
ten to fuck with you. It’s a ghostly
piece indeed, featuring prominent bass, and is designed to be that penultimate
change of pace that cools events down before the big finish. Possibly about the Vietnam War, it’s got a
Bauhaus vibe to it, and maybe those quiet parts of ‘Invalid Litter Dept.’ It’s an approach that it might have been
interesting to see more of beyond a few short track intros. Finally it’s more of the same with the decent
closer ‘Hostage Stamps.’ Tape, stamps,
scissors, rolodexes: what is this bands obsession with stationary? It’s either because they’re so artsy or
secretly so shockingly boring.
This record came out a while back, yet there
was an intriguing post-script that came about in November. I had written more about this, but didn’t
want to get too off-track, clickbaitish and sensational; if you want more, you
can follow the links. It does however
serve as a microcosm of the overwhelming forces and shittery of the times that
I talked of earlier. Last month
Bixler-Zavala revealed that ‘Incurably Innocent’ concerns the rape of his wife Chrissie Carnell Bixler
by the actor Danny Masterson. The #MeToo
hashtag movement now has to contend with a man shielded by the Church of
Scientology, the LAPD, Netflix, PI’s and, supposedly, dog-killing thugs.
The line “Marching to the coffins
on Franklin Avenue” is a reference to an L.A. street where the Church has
its original “Project Celebrity” centre, part of a concerted effort to pull
rich people into their weird beard sphere of influence. (Just to bring together the subject matter of
two songs that I’ve explained at length here, ‘Holtztclaw’ is about a piece of
shit cop who sexually assaulted over a dozen black women in Oklahoma during
2014, and was, astonishingly, actually sent to the clink for it by an all-white
jury.)
Personally, I’ll always associate At The Drive
In with a time of comforting, big-haired, alt-post-hardcore during the early
2000s, along with Hundred Reasons and Million Dead (Tony’s vendetta against
Frank Turner notwithstanding). This
gives me some of that feeling. In•ter A•li•a is a legal term meaning
“among other things,” which makes sense given the many other projects the
members of ATDI have. It suggests that
Cedric and Omar Rodríguez-López are serious when they talk of trying to weave back
and forth between them rather than killing them off, which is good news for
Drive In fans. From what I’ve read the
opinions of more dedicated listeners of the band are somewhat split on what
they managed on this album, but I plant this firmly in the good column. Artists are between a rock and a hard place
when it comes to their approach writing new material after long periods of
inactivity. Nevertheless it’s a sound
that’s still interesting and satisfying enough for shortcomings to be
forgiven. Of all the bands to eventually
have reunions -- which is to say, every former group with at least one living
member -- At The Drive In come out pretty respectably.
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