Beat The Devil's Tattoo

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (270 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 65:35

eMusic Review

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Andrew Parks

Director of Merchandising

03.08.10
The band's instability results in a record for the resume
2010 | Label: Vagrant Records / Abstract Dragon

"Stable" is not a word that's normally associated with Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. Since the group's San Francisco start in the late '90s — a period frontman Peter Hayes spent living in his hatchback — it's as if they've been hellbent on following the Marlon Brando fantasies of their biker gang name.

Or maybe it was all Nick Jago's fault. The band's off-and-on drummer left for the second time in 2008, admitting "I don't make it easy for them," and leaving the possibility of a reunion open but unlikely. (This in reference to such incidents as the time Jago accepted an NME Award at a televised ceremony by saying absolutely nothing for seven minutes).

So what happens when the tension in a volatile power trio gets yanked? Not a whole lot, actually. As would be expected from anyone's fifth album (sixth, if you count the soundscape experiments that are spread across The Effects of 333), BRMC treats Beat the Devil's Tattoo as a resume record — a "this is what we've done, and this is what we'd like to do" sort of thing. And by that, we mean it has tracks that reference everything from the acoustic asides of Howl (the piano-led… read more »

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Effecient BRMC

dmdstrhalo

Not a "defining" album like their debut or Howl, nor does it flirt with pop like Baby 81, but if you like what they do, they do it here as well. Not too sparkly, but solid.

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A strange thing happened to me on the way to the B

Blochead

How can Howl be SO much better than everything else they've done?

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Amazing

FreeSpkr

This band is amazing. Truly talented and awesome to see live. No pretending...just good music. You can't go wrong.

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Muscular and Earthy Shoegaze

malomono

Muscular and earthy shoegaze glistening with gritty dark energy. Includes similar faint (really faint at times) hints of old-school C&W and country blues in the music and lyrics that help Darklands by The Jesus & Mary Chain standout as a classic of the genre. Time will tell if the same thing will happen here. Either way I'll be taking another spin on this one real soon now.

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