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Kill the Moonlight

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Spoon

 
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Kill the Moonlight
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Avg: 4.5 (1315 ratings)

Spoon's last moment as everyone's favorite unknown band.

  • We Say...

    Following the disappointing Girls Can Tell, Kill the Moonlight was a tremendous comeback for Spoon, a return to the taut, rhythmic feel of A Series of Sneaks (still their best album). "The Way We Get By" was Spoon's first real anthem, Britt Daniel flirtatiously barking, "You sweet talk like a cop, and you know it/ You bought a new bag of pot/ So let's make a new start," and then offering a raison d'etre straight outta Dazed and Confused: "We get high in backseats of cars."

    The weed singalongs stop there, but the joyful punch does not. "Stay Don't Go" is the rare instance of indie rock and beatboxing (of sorts) mixing well. "Small Stakes" feels ready to be the theme song of your favorite new sitcom. "Jonathan Fisk" is straight rock, the likes of which we'd get much more of with Gimme Fiction. "Don't Let It Get You Down" is just the right amount of bittersweet. And finally, both "Vittorio E" and "Paper Tiger" bring a beautiful wooziness, and in hindsight clearly suggest "The Ghost of You Lingers," the Reich-ian single from Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga.

    Kill the Moonlight was Spoon's last moment as everyone's favorite unknown band. With Gimme Fiction two years later, the (comparative) big time was theirs. It was Kill the Moonlight that earned them those stripes.

  • They Say...

    Coming just a year-and-a-half after their triumphant return Girls Can Tell, Kill the Moonlight isn't so much a step backward as a step sideways, almost like a breather after the emotional and musical intensity of their previous album. It isn't surprising, really, that the group would choose to follow such a cathartic album as Girls Can Tell with a collection of tougher, leaner, and meaner songs like "All the Pretty Girls Go to the City," which sounds like the inverse of Girls' "Everything Hits at Once"; "The Way We Get By," a prime example of Spoon's smart, nervy rock; or the spare, spooky pop of "Paper Tiger" and "Someone Something." It is somewhat surprising, however, that Spoon managed to pare down their sound even more on Kill the Moonlight -- tracks such as "Small Stakes" and "Something to Look Forward To" are so stripped-down and sculpted that they're practically aerodynamic; the only problem is that they don't always take off from there. Still, even the album's sparest moments feature Spoon's much-heralded knack with catchy melodies and hooks, even if songs such as "Don't Let It Get You Down" would be even more memorable with a slightly more fleshed-out approach. Hints of this appear on the songs with unique production twists, such as "Stay Don't Go," which sports a human beatbox rhythm; on the distant backing vocals and baritone saxes of "You Gotta Feel It"; and on the album-closer, "Vittorio E.," an undulating, vaguely psychedelic ballad that finally gives the band's playing and songwriting the full treatment they deserve. Though the album's brittle immediacy is far from a disappointment, and the quick turnaround between Kill the Moonlight and their previous one is a treat for Spoon fans, one can't help but notice that this album just isn't as revelatory as Girls Can Tell. But even if the artistic course Spoon seems to be plotting is two steps forward, one step back, it's more than rewarding enough to enjoy every stop on the journey.

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