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No Wow (CD)

The Kills

[Cover]

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Released: 2005 List Price: 29.98
Price: $28.48  
 
 
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It's hard to believe that the Kills could sound even darker, tighter, and more stripped-down than they did on Keep on Your Mean Side, but somehow they managed it: No Wow is one of the most highly concentrated rock albums in a long, long time. In fact, its tight focus and barely relenting intensity make Keep on Your Mean Side's more traditional ebb and flow feel downright slack. The band's throbbing guitars, to-the-point rhythms, and sexy, dangerous lyrics have been simmered and tempered down to their barest essences, so much so that No Wow often feels like a stark, stylized caricature of rock. Less is usually more for the Kills, though, and they sound more powerful, more confident, and more distinctive here than they did on their debut. "No Wow" itself is a fantastic opener, a powerful statement of intent and of curdled but still compelling love (or lust), the likes of which hasn't been heard since Rid of Me's title track. From there, the album doesn't let up until the sweetly narcotized "I Hate the Way You Love, Pt. 2." Most of No Wow feels like monochromatic variations on the same sounds and themes -- monochromatic, but not monotonous. Wisely, the Kills have chosen to let their drum machine sound like a drum machine, giving songs like "Love Is a Deserter" a skeletal clatter for a backbone, and others, such as "The Good Ones" and "Sweet Cloud," a piston-like thrust. The magnificently taut "Dead Road 7" adds shades of menacing, mysterious country/blues storytelling to the band's songwriting, a direction they should pursue more. At times, No Wow can feel a little too compressed and high-contrast for its own good -- the album downplays the poppier moments that balanced Keep on Your Mean Side's onslaughts. However, since there are so few soft, slow songs here, they're thrown into even sharper relief. "Rodeo Town" is one of the loveliest, and grittiest, ballads that the band has written, and "Ticket Man" ends the album on a hypnotic, reflective note. And though Hotel's vocals are also downplayed (and missed), it has to be said that VV does a compelling job of handling the lioness' share of the singing. A tight, mean set of songs, No Wow feels like a fight going on in a closet -- there's no room for punches to swing, but all of the shoving and grappling makes just as big an impact. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1No Wow/Telephone Radio Germany
2Love Is a Deserter
3Dead Road 7
4Good Ones
5I Hate the Way You Love
6I Hate the Way You Love, Pt. 2
7At the Back of the Shell
8Sweet Cloud
9Rodeo Town
10Murdermile
11Ticket Man

 

User Reviews

   JDH - NY, NY, USA
The Kills are a duo that plays stripped down blues rock. Their second full length album No Wow is full of dirty, fuzzed out tunes that almost remind you of a more minimal White Stripes. Hotel and VV (their names) combine heavy bass guitars with drums. They even use simple electronic drum beats on tracks like ''The Good Ones'' that bring a new aspect to the blues rock sound. No Wow has a raw passion that seems to be missing from many of today's bands.


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