eMusic Review 0
Released in 1980, Seventeen Seconds finds the Cure a very different band than the one that recorded 1979's Three Imaginary Boys. That record opened with the itchy St. Vitus Dance number "10:15 Saturday Night," but Seventeen Seconds starts with a piano plinking out a minor-key melody — music better suited to grave-digging than body-moving. It's a bit of a fakeout; the Cure weren't yet ready to take that long day's journey into night. But that doesn't make Seventeen Seconds Combat Rock. Throughout, the band favors clean lines and rigid structures, giving 17 Seconds a bleached, brittle feeling. The music is impressively skeletal: the guitars in "Play for Today" are tense as a wire fence; "M," which takes its name from Fritz Lang's eerie film about a child murderer, stalks and lurches moodily, hands in its trenchcoat pockets, sour look on its face. The best moments are the ones that feel loaded with implication: the slow-crawling guitar line that sets up "A Forest" is splendidly icy, a testament to what can happen when an economical arrangement meets a cynical worldview. Seventeen Seconds raises gooseflesh using just the tips of its chilly fingers.