Thursday, February 18, 2010
Be Bop Deluxe “Axe Victim” (1974)
As mentioned in all other assessments of this album, the influence of Ziggy Stardust permeates Axe Victim from Bill's Bowiesque mullet down to the freeze-dried production, self-mythologizing content and plasticized space-age musical character of the songs. However, beneath it's glam-bandwagoning lies an imaginative album that's easy to enjoy if you're able to lower the blinders to it's Ziggy impersonations, while guitar hero worshipers will find in Nelson's hyperactive cascades of fuzz an idol worthy of praise. Highlighted in the "Rock & Roll Suicide" inspired urban wasteland of "Adventures in a Yorkshire Landscape," the axe-victimizing epic "Jets at Dawn," anthemic "Jet Silver and the Dolls of Venus," and shadowy orchestrated closer "Darkness," Nelson and his Be Boppers turn in a set of over-literate but oddly engaging tracks whose charms are probably easier to appreciate given three decades of glam dormancy. Inevitably, Nelson would call an audible and leave Axe Victim a curious footnote to his prolific career, but it's a forgotten son worth getting reacquainted with. –Ben
Labels:
Album Reviews,
Rock
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment