Imperial Wax Solvent

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Imperial Wax Solvent album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 47:14

eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of Can’s Tago Mago

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It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

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eMusic Yearbook: 2002

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Maybe it's a coincidence that three fabulous and endlessly eclectic DJ mix-CDs - John Peel's FabricLive 07, 2 Many DJ's As Heard on Radio Soulwax Pt. 2, and DJ /rupture's Minesweeper Suite - all came out in 2002. But it sure didn't feel that way at the time. Of course, eclectic DJ mixes were nothing new; they'd been a standard from at least 1995, when Coldcut released 70 Minutes of Madness. But 2002 was a… more »

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Icon: The Fall

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

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An Introduction to the Monks

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

Imagine this scenario. You're in a club somewhere in Germany, watching the crudest, funniest garage-rock band you've ever seen. They're wearing monastic robes and nooses around their necks; they've shaved their heads into tonsures. One of them is playing a banjo, with which the PA system is ill-equipped to deal. The drummer's technique is pleasingly caveman-like. The guitar player is blitzing the crowd with feedback. The singer is gibbering like a lunatic, screaming "DO YOU… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Recorded after a tour that found leader/vocalist/lyricist Mark E. Smith handing out his umpteenth set of pink-slips and changing about half the band, Imperial Wax Solvent is a surprisingly vital and solid release, benefiting from a hungry young band under the guidance of a veteran who is inspired, jaded, and often sounds twice as hungry as the young bucks. After getting the artful, “difficult” number out of the way (“Alton Towers”) and riffling through the garage rock-loving song (“Wolf Kidult Man”) that’s a hallmark of every great Fall album, Smith speaks to his age with the monolithic, 11-plus minute highlight “50 Year Old Man” (“I’m a fifty year old man/What you gonna do about it?”) where buzzing, throbbing, and quintessential riffing from the band gives way to rustic banjo plucking right before the free jazz freak-out comes in. Even in a discography filled with legendary maverick tracks, “50 Year Old Man” is a standout, one that contains the great Smith insult “You’re a gym teacher/You’re a cancer/And I expect/A little shit.” This beast is tempered with the following “I’ve Been Duped” where Eleni Polou — returning bandmember and Smith’s wife — delivers a punkish and ever so simple hook as the gripping guitar and drum throb returns. “Taurig” brings the early Devo-styled electronics, “Tommy Shooter” is a midtempo, full-bodied winner, while “Latch Key Kid” returns to the first person rebellion against the stereotypes with “Got my muso wit/Can’t do up my zip/I’m a latch key kid.” Every necessary bit of Imperial Wax Solvent proves Smith is not the mess he’s been painted as, and while it would be nice to say it’s everything great about his Fall in equal shares, that breakaway single like “Cruiser’s Creek” or “Touch Sensitive” is missing, unless the rock-solid hook of “Senior Twilight Stock Replacer” can overcome its the unmanageable title. This is top-shelf Fall, but it’s best for those who have already studied one or two of their other masterpieces. – David Jeffries

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