Kaki King ~ Junior review
ALBUM REVIEWS :: NEWS :: CRUD RADIO ::NEW RELEASES::PREVIEWS::HOME
 
SAMARITANS - CHANGE OUR MINDS
 
 
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
MEDIA STREAM PREVIEW
play with Windows Media
Play Crud Radio - 1 hour of great music mixed exclusively for Crud
CRUD MUSIC MAG  ALERTS

review archive

:: July 2008
:: June 2008
:: May 2008
:: April 2008
:: March 2008
:: February 2008
:: January 2008
:: December 2007
:: November 2007
:: October 2007
:: September 2007
:: August 2007
:: July 2007
:: June 2007
:: May 2007
:: April 2007
:: March 2007
:: February 2007
:: January 2007
:: December 2006
  crud album reviews
archived reviews

 
'Junior' album cover

Kaki King
Junior

Label:
Cooking Vinyl
Rating:****
Submitted
: 01/06/2010
Review by: Alan Sargeant
www:
http://www.kakiking.com

This is something of a departure for Kaki King. Okay, it’s not a totally unexpected departure as the guitarist’s 2008 album, ‘Dreaming of Revenge’ provided enough road signs, but it is still no less surprising to hear all those desultory jazz signatures and fret-wobbling vagaries coalesce into actual songs, and rock songs, for that matter. Sure, there had always been the basic germ of an angry, misanthropic slacker type burrowing around in her gentle, and frustratingly instrumental ruminations about life straddling the gender divide but seldom were they as grizzly as this. And whereas it used to be the case that Kaki would lift the occasional whisper for only one or two songs on the album, she now pumps out her lungs on most of them. In fact, it’s all rather like having Harold Lloyd turn to the camera and scream, such is the remarkableness of the transformation.

Pitched somewhere between the woozy spit and grit of Montreal’s ‘Land of Talk’ and the ethereal grunge of Sonic Youth, songs like ‘The Betrayer’ and ‘Falling Day’ bring the prog-rock franchise bang up to speed with riffs as wiry as Steve Howe’s and venom as poisonous as a bagful of asps with King’s choppy waters only occasionally calmed by the somnolent and wistful psychedelia of ‘The Hoopers of Hudspeth’ and the rippling arpeggios of ‘My Nerves That Committed Suicide’. Like a river, the record's journey is influenced but not controlled by its surroundings; it carves its own niche in its own time.

'Junior' is a fairly bookish proposition, but not overly wordy, King preferring the youthful malapropisms and mispronunciations of innocence than anything close to verbosity. The closest parallel I could draw is Willy Vlautin’s ‘Thirteen Cities’ – like Carlos Fuentes set to music - but this time with leather wristbands.

I know one thing; this river is certain to burst.

Kaki King website  Kaki King website
fetch more reviews

more album reviews

Brendan Perry - Ark ::  Kathryn Williams - ‘Playing Out – Songs For Children & Robots’ ::  Eliza Doolittle - Eliza Doolittle ::  I Am Kloot - Sky At Night ::  Grasscut - 1 inch/ ½ Mile ::  Bodi Bill - Two In One ::  The Pipettes - Earth Versus The Pipettes ::  Black Francis - Six Legged Man ::  Herve - Ghetto Bass 2 ::  Mixtapes & Cellmates - Rox ::  Pavement - Quarantine The Past: The Best of Pavement ::  Pernice Brothers - Goodbye, Killer ::  Kaki King - Junior ::  Dan Sartain - Lives! ::  Quasi - American Gong ::  Bonobo - Black Sands ::  Tom McRae - Alphabet of the Hurricanes ::  Paul Weller - Wake Up The Nation ::  To Rococo Rot - Speculation ::  Lightspeed Champion - Life Is Sweet! Nice To Meet You! :: 

 
 
 
 

© CRUD MUSIC MAGAZINE/
2-4-7-MUSIC.COM 2009

STILL refusing to dumb it down.

CRUD MUSIC MAGAZINE HOME :: NEW RELEASES :: MUSIC REVIEWS :: MYCRUDSPACE :: MEDIA STREAMS :: MUSIC NEWS :: ADVERTISING :: POLLS :: CONTACT US ::
 
Crud Magazine is set up and maintained in accordance with permissions and conditions agreed by all parties.