I’ve started writing my first ever
song today. Most of the tune is in my
head, but I am feeling cautiously optimistic that I’ll be able to get it down
on the page as well with the help of my guitar.
In the meantime, I’m focused on the lyrics and having a hell of a good
time being creative.
Meanwhile, over in the land of
other people’s music (aka the CD Odyssey) the reign of double album terror has
finally abated with this next album.
Disc 528 is…. Louder Than Love
Artist: Soundgarden
Year of Release: 1989
What’s up with the Cover? Chris Cornel in his long-haired youth rocks out. I’m not a big fan of this cover, but it fits
the grunge vibe of the era; it is visceral and deliberately non-pretentious (in
a pretentious kind of way, of course).
How I Came To Know It: As I’ve mentioned in previous reviews, my friend and
former roommate Greg introduced me to Soundgarden, and this album was one he
purchased one day. I had never heard of
them before that, but I liked what I heard.
How It Stacks Up: I have five Soundgarden albums (still hemming and
hawing about “King Animal”). I had
cleverly saved the 4th slot for this album, forgetting how great it
is. In fact, this album is brilliant,
and second only to my all-time favourite, “Badmotorfinger.”
As this
is the last Soundgarden album I currently have for review, tradition dictates a
quick recap in order of preference (with two albums being bumped from their
original ranking):
- Badmotorfinger: 5 stars (reviewed at Disc 283)
- Louder
Than Love: 4 stars
(reviewed right here)
- Superunknown: 4 stars (reviewed at Disc 481)
- Screaming
Life/Fopp: 3 stars (reviewed at Disc 393)
- Down
on the Upside: 2 stars (reviewed at Disc 304)
Rating: 4 stars
It
should come as no surprise that an album titled “Louder Than Love” is going to
sound better at high volumes. What is
surprising is it took me twenty years or so to properly realize this. My friend Spence has praised it for years and
once again I find upon further review that he is right. The man knows his music.
Earlier
listens to this record were generally in my house, where (apart from one
exception noted below) I never really turned it up that loud or in the car,
where a lot of the sound layering is lost in engine noise. Consequently, I’ve always given “Louder Than
Love” short shrift. This listen was
entirely on high quality headphones as I walked to and from work, and early in
the first track, “Ugly Truth”
something deep inside me told me to turn it louder.
“Ugly Truth” is a great launch point for “Louder
Than Love.” It has equal parts groove-driven guitar riff, subtle but beautiful
melodies and a chunky metal flavour throughout.
It is this metal element that originally had me loving Soundgarden most
of all the grunge bands that emerged in the late eighties, and they have no
heavier album than this. “Badmotorfinger”
comes close, and I think it is more complete overall, but for sheer visceral
energy “Louder Than Love” is the bomb.
This
energy is driven partly by Chris Cornell, one of rock’s all-time great
vocalists. The man can scream in three octaves
and still stay in tune. The band is
extremely tight for so early in their career.
This is critical with grunge’s thick fuzzy sound to avoid a muddy result
(exactly what happened to many copycat grunge bands of the time). Fortunately Kim Thayil on guitar, Hiro
Yamamoto on bass and Matt Cameron on drums are all equal to the task of holding
up and augmenting Cornell’s genius.
The
album has a dark quality which is pretty common for Soundgarden. “Ugly
Truth” is particularly filled with self-loathing as Cornell growls:
“I painted my eyes
Ugly isn’t what I wanted to see
I painted my mind
Ugly isn’t what I wanted to be”
And then
the sad admission of how he views a relationship:
“If you were mine to give
I might throw you away.”
The
self-loathing becomes menacing on track three’s “Gun” where over a pounding, plodding riff Cornell ominously opens
with “I’ve got an idea of something we
can with the gun.”
The
album has a flavour of rage throughout, but in some of the darker moments I
actually think the band is trying to be humorous. “Full
On Kevin’s Mom” is a song about three friends that have a falling out when
one of them decides to hook up with one of their mom’s. The song is filled with all the hurt and
anger you’d expect from a friendship collapsing in this way. Still, Soundgarden’s treatment of this
inappropriate intergenerational relationship was strangely funny and the source
of many a ribald reference for a few years.
Funny provided you weren’t Kevin, I suppose.
After
the powerful “Loud Love” rages at
track seven, the album has a minor let down in terms of quality, with “I Awake”, “No Wrong, No Right” and “Uncovered”
all lacking the focus and direction of the earlier part of the album.
Things
are recovered in the penultimate track with “Big Dumb Sex” a song about exactly what you’d imagine it would
be. On the “Screaming Life/Fopp” EPs
Soundgarden had similar material with “Kingdom
of Come” and “Swallow My Pride”
but on “Big Dumb Sex” the band
decides to abandon innuendo and clever wordplay and just get straight to the
subject at hand with:
“Don’t you don’t you want to
thrill me
Don’t you be afraid to tell me
Tell me if you think it’s ugly
But don’t you want to touch it
anyway.”
When I
was twenty I remember my blasting this song with everything our crappy ghetto
blaster could unleash in our apartment.
The landlady was over about sixty seconds after it ended to deliver a
terse message of “Don’t ever do that again.”
Hell of a first day in the new place.
“Louder
Than Love” is brilliant overall, but being at a pretty good place in my life, I
find it hard to soak that much negativity in and still feel energized the way
the music intends. I still love this
record though, which is big and sexy, and only dumb when it wants to be.
Best tracks: Ugly Truth, Hands All Over, Gun, Get on the Snake,
Full on Kevin’s Mom, Loud Love, Big Dumb Sex
1 comment:
As an old roommate and friend of Logan's I feel it necessary to say there were many requests by our neighbours, at the time, to 'turn down the music' while Big Dumb Sex was playing.
We weren't notorious party animals but come on, that song must to be played loud.
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