eMusic Review 0
If the members of Cake took an oath against irony, recorded an album of Von Trapp Family favorites and brought baskets of puppies and kittens onstage, would the world finally accept their sincerity? Showroom of Compassion, the alt-pop quintet's first album of new material since 2004, is their most serious attempt to be taken seriously. Recorded in a studio powered by solar energy, it maintains their funk-lite rhythms, schmaltz-trumpet flourishes and whingy keyboards, but adds heavier guitars, Beatlesque harmonies and even a riff from Moonlight Sonata. Singer John McCrea still deadpans and talk-sings, but several tracks are either directly or indirectly topical. "Federal Funding" crams together '70s soul, '60s psychedelia and a whiff of electronica to slam corporations that pillage government coffers; "Got to Move" and "Sick of You" skewer mindless consumption and the dissatisfaction it brings. "Every camera, every phone/ All the music that you own/ Won't change the fact you're all alone," McCrea lectures. "What's Now Is Now" doesn't exactly lay a heart bare, but it is a chilling evocation of the way couples manipulate each other even when they're apologizing, built around isolated strums on a ratty-sounding guitar.
Cake does a noble job of addressing the hollow core… read more »