The Charlatans - Different Days

The Guardian 80

(BMG)

The Charlatans have endured two members’ deaths and a breakdown. Such upheavals have wrought resilience, reflection and subtle metamorphosis. Here, guest drummers (ex-Verve man Pete Salisbury, New Order’s Stephen Morris – who also programmes – and A Certain Ratio’s Donald Johnson) bring a different funk. Other contributors include the Smiths’ Johnny Marr (guitar on three tracks) and crime novelist Ian Rankin (spoken word). Paul Weller donates some of his best music for the soulful Spinning Out, while elsewhere there are musical echoes of New Order and Love.

However, the Charlatans’ 13th album is grounded on the band’s own indestructible chemistry, Tim Burgess’s exquisitely happy-sad vocals and their ability to juggle melancholy and joy into exhilarating pop songs. Solutions and the title track have hooks in abundance. Plastic Machinery salutes individuality in an authoritarian world. Not Forgotten and There Will Be Chances capture beautifully a sense of progress through remembrance, the beating heart of the band’s finest effort since 1996’s Telling Stories.

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Thu May 25 20:45:39 GMT 2017

The Guardian 60

(BMG)

Respect must be paid to the Charlatans for continuing to release new material when it would surely be easier to live off the nostalgia circuit. Different Days retains the breezy feel of their superb 2015 comeback Modern Nature, even if the songs are rarely as convincing. Despite turning 50 this month, Tim Burgess’s vocals are as yearning and quizzical as ever – almost passionate on the lovely title track. This 13th album may be too subdued or restrained for some, lacking the combustible power of their live work, but over the years the Charlatans have dug a groove they sound incredibly comfortable inhabiting.

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Sun May 28 07:00:03 GMT 2017