Red Hot Chili Peppers - The Getaway
The Guardian 60
(Warner Bros)
Related: Rock music is dead, says Red Hot Chili Peppers' bassist Flea
The funk-rock veterans’ return got off to a stuttering start: sessions were put on hold following bassist Flea’s snowboarding injury, Anthony Kiedis was hospitalised with intestinal flu, and around 30 songs were scrapped before this album was completed. The stormy, sullen first single Dark Necessities is far from shambolic, however. With production from Danger Mouse, who takes over Rick Rubin’s 25-year stint with the group, RHCP’s sound has become surprisingly streamlined. Guitarist Josh Klinghoffer’s style brings out a spacier, melancholy feel that mutes the burliness of previous records. Feasting on the Flowers is a mournful story about the death of a friend, while The Longest Wave is delicate in its downcast approach. That said, clunky metaphors and couplets (such as the machine romancing on Go Robot: “I want to thank you and spank you upon your silver skin”) – all too often come along and puncture the pensiveness.
Continue reading... Thu Jun 16 20:45:28 GMT 2016Pitchfork 54
Anthony Kiedis has had enough of your jokes, jeers, and general bullshit–and can you blame him? 30-odd years after his band formed, the Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman can’t catch a break. While we’re all sitting on our asses, cracking jokes about his hospitalization and his best friend’s rendition of the National Anthem, he and his pals are out there hustling—spreading love and #posivibes to stadiums worldwide, rescuing babies while doing Carpool karaoke with his bandmates, and getting inducted into the Rock n’ Roll Hall of Fame. Music isn’t a game to him–neither are carefully-placed tube socks. Appropriately, then, the Peppers’ first single from their eleventh album The Getaway, “Dark Necessities,” is no cheerful comeback celebration–in fact, it’s downright confrontational. “You don’t know my mind,” he sneers on the chorus, “You don’t know my kind.” Fueled by this self-awareness (subservient to a broader desire to shush the haters), the Peppers have come to set the record straight. (Take that, Mike Patton.)
Like 2011's I’m With You, The Getaway marks a changing-of-hands in the Peppers camp: it’s their first album since 1989’s Mothers’ Milk without Rick Rubin behind the boards. While the producer's absence hasn’t stirred up the same anxiety among acolytes as John Frusciante did when he left the group at the end of the '00s, its significance can’t be understated. Sure, Frusciante's guitarist’s showy solos and funk prowess certainly played foundational roles in the Peppers' halcyon days, but as far as arrangements, engineering, sequencing, and overall sound were concerned, Rubin deserves equal credit for crafting the sonic blueprint that turned four horny goofballs from Los Angeles into kings of the global stadium circuit: crisp, crunchy, crass–and immediate.
Rubin's playbook has blessed the Peppers with a quarter-century of successful chart showings and tours, but it’s also left them sock-deep in a creative quagmire for the past several LPs, dragged down by blaring, untextured mixes and a fatal lack of boundaries in matters of alpha-male kabuki. Good thing they picked the right duo to help them clamber out of the pit on The Getaway: pop-smith extraordinaire Brian “Danger Mouse” Burton produced the record and co-wrote five of its tracks, with longtime Radiohead collaborator Nigel Godrich handling the mixing. If Rubin's uniform racket is engineered to tickle the reptile brain, then Burton’s approach to rock production–best illustrated by his recurring collaborations with the Black Keys–seeks to unite a divided audience through commonalities, developing frisson through the simultaneous overlaps and juxtapositions between genres, textures, and patches of negative space.
Unsurprisingly, The Getaway easily stands as the Peppers’ lushest album to date, a welcome reprieve from 25 years of cramped, inert, (and in the case of Californication, occasionally unlistenable) mixes. While their sonic tropes haven’t changed–what would a Red Hot Chili Peppers album be without Flea’s slappy solos, Kiedis’ staccato raps, or full-band funk breakdowns?–Burton's foggy, psychedelic palette marks a drastic shift in the presentation of those motifs, widening the gulf between the band's funk-metal past and their hang-loose, jam-band present. The producer’s usual cinematic flourishes (fervent strings, accentuated flange, melancholy keys) reveal his influence immediately, and occasionally excessively; The inert trip-hop arrangements showcased on “Feasting on the Flowers” and “The Hunter” (both co-written by Burton) could have come from the cutting-room floor after one of his Broken Bells sessions, while closing track “Dreams of a Samurai” suffers from a severe case of atmospheric bloat.
The Getaway proves far more successful when Burton steps back and lets the band funk around (with a little extra supervision, of course). Employing an organic approach similar to his winning strategy on Radiohead’s A Moon Shaped Pool, Godrich staggers the tracks so the band's grooves can breathe–and more importantly, so their instrumental prowess can be put to use for a change: especially the talents of guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who joined the band after Frusciante’s departure. Whereas I’m With You delegated the axeman to a textural supporting role, The Getaway casts the newest Pepper as a proper successor to Frusciante, ramping up his duties as a soloist and backup vocalist. Klinghoffer's yet to surpass his mentor's technical skill and overall gravitas, but between Kiedis’ puff-chested posturing and Flea and Smith's explosive percussive dynamics, the guitarist's restraint provides a much-needed anchor.
By now, Peppers fans know better than to expect Pulitzer-worthy poetry from a goofy bard like Kiedis: his rapping continues to function primarily as a vocal extension of his bandmates' rhythm section, rather than a thematic vehicle (unless there’s some hidden metaphorical genius embedded in couplets like “Up to my ass in alligators/Let’s get it on with the alligator haters”; I’m certainly amenable to enlightenment). Considering how the Peppers’ hopes of escaping their comfort zone led them to Burton and Godrich in the first place, the album’s lyrical stasis scans as disappointing, if unsurprising. Less than two minutes into the album, Kiedis gives his first shoutout to Call-ee-phon-ya; from there, the perfunctory Golden State worship quickly plummets into The Californians territory. "Driving down Calexico highway,” he croons on “Encore,” “and now I know the signs for sure.” Stuart, is that you? At least he delves into some other topics, including sex with robots (from the silvery highlight “Go Robot:” “You’ve got to choose it to use it so let me plug it in/Robots are my next of kin”) and Brazilians ("I met a girl with long black hair and she opened up so wide,” he boasts on “This Ticonderoga”), Iggy Pop & J Dilla (on a song called–what else?–“Detroit”), and worst of all, a dance Kiedis calls “The Avocado.” He even proffers up a few life lessons, including the following nugget of wisdom: "We are all just soldiers in this battlefield of life.”
Were it not for these issues and the B-Side's proliferation of yawn-inducing, stoned slow jams, The Getaway could have potentially bested By The Way as the Peppers’ best work post-Californication. By tapping into what made the Peppers Rock Hall-worthy–their instrumental potency, their extensive knowledge of funk, their willingness to laugh at themselves (to a point)–Burton and Godrich have gracefully, gently steered the band back on the right track. At the very least, this surprisingly complex album lends credence to Kiedis’ accusations. Maybe we don't know his mind, or his kind–or at least not quite like we thought.
The Guardian 40
(Warner Bros)
Eleven albums in, and LA’s grizzled funk-rock reprobates are tinkering with the formula. The Getaway is the Chili Peppers’ second album with newish guitarist Josh Klinghoffer and their first since 1989 without producer Rick Rubin: Brian “Danger Mouse” Burton is behind the faders, introducing Beatley nuances on Feasting on the Flowers and a little unexpected disco sparkle on Go Robot; Nigel Godrich mixes – a hook-up born of bassist Flea’s sojourn in Atoms for Peace. Fans will probably find The Getaway an improvement on 2011’s I’m With You, citing tunes such as Detroit. Sceptics will continue to boggle at their enduring charmlessness, a problem not even Danger Mouse can fix.
Continue reading... Sun Jun 19 06:59:02 GMT 2016Tiny Mix Tapes 40
Red Hot Chili Peppers
The Getaway
[Warner Bros.; 2016]
Rating: 2/5
I know better now, but when I was a teenager, Blood, Sugar, Sex & Magic was on heavy rotation, and it was dumb and fun and horny as I was. The “yeah, I fuck, it ain’t no thing” machismo on the dirty novelty song “Sir Psycho Sexy” was the most disconcerting bit of prurient ephemera I’d experienced since that robot rape art on the Appetite For Destruction sleeve. It was base and for shock and I appreciated that, even if it wasn’t really me exactly. So even though all these years later that mustache might make me wanna chop off The Kied’s head with a Queen record and I won’t soon forget the words “sexy sandwich,” I musn’t let these things derail this review. You’re likely here to feed your Pepperhead, not squish your toes in some “I’m so over this now” snark loam. That would be a waste of time.
Much like Mr. Bungle before them, yacht-rock chintz seems to have caught The Chili Peppers imagination as they’ve aged. Nite Jewel keyboard hooks abound, especially on “Go Robot,” which I confess is queasier than a grope on a Gravitron (“I wanna thank you and spank you on your silver skin, robots don’t care where I’ve been”), but put some splashing, sizzling grill and babbling conversation and it’ll help a lot of Americans relax this summer. A tour sponsored by Solo cups could be key (I know I don’t have to explain to the boys what to stuff in those complementary cups!). But then I’m thinking like an east-coaster. This is desert swank, its hair-shortened-Bon-Jovi-in-a-palm-tree affability playing on your chakras in a way that is pure pastel pacification (with a hearty pinch of mid-life hangover, saggy tattoo sulking).
Flea’s time with Thom Yorke in Atoms for Peace seems to have spurred a more somber, dark lounge approach, particularly on “The Hunter.” “Time just gets its way, strawberries left to decay,” Kiedis sings, and one can picture him rocking in a tortured position next to Flea at the piano, with pointy shadows shrinking and expanding around them. The haunted autumnal vibes continue on epic closer “The Dreams of a Samurai.” Make that a “Metamorphosis Samurai.” A Spaghetti Western character of sorts, the Metamorphosis Samurai finds a young girl on a tour bus. Thinking the “pretty gift” will make him feel less alone, he instead finds himself a kitchen, naked and robbed of memory. “I lost myself out on the range,” which suggests the protagonist is metamorphosing out of samurai-hood and into madness. What the tabloids won’t tell you, the Metamorphosis Samurai fills in: “Don’t ask me, I’ve gone insane.” The fire & brimstone harmonies by the vocal choir (Beverley Chitwood, Alexx Daye, David Loucks, Kennya Ramsey, Matthew Selby, SJ Selby, Loren Smith, and Gregory Whipple) at the end of the track are decidedly sick. Sick as the hellfire that will surely consume the Metamorphosis Samurai when the fog clears and his song is done.
Speaking of sick as hell, Danger Mouse does wondrous things with his production work. Although The Peps have largely shed their P-Funk overtones in favor of (aggravatingly infectious) emo crooning, Burton pays homage to their roots in tasteful ways that somehow never seem out of place on the vape pyramid terrace. Co-opted as they may be, the best tracks tend to be the ones that aren’t attempting to mine old hooks for new hits. A big contender for one has got to be the Smashmouth sunbleach of “Sick Love,” which apes the verse melody of “Bennie and The Jets” (apparently, that’s Elton John, faintly accompanying on the keys). It’s a hit that’ll cause garden-variety smells to feel like aneurysm precursors, but a hit nonetheless. I think Hesh would say so, anyway.
But every song on here has the potential to make you move mindlessly. Despite yourself, or in tribute to someone else. Sometimes you’re happy enough. You can glimpse the clear, crisp air above the thicket of your opinions and perceptions. You can almost picture not giving a damn about music or film or the internet or the Golden Age of TV ever again, and it seems like an impossibility of resolution and calm. When you drop out of it, you’re always tapping your stupid toes to this. We don’t just gotta live together, we gotta groooooove together. Make wild-arm gesticulations together. Look at ourselves and laugh in shock together. Getaway together. Come back together. There’s a lot to share besides static, especially when the finer things keep shining through with such reliable frequency.
01. The Getaway
02. Dark Necessities
03. We Turn Red
04. The Longest Wave
05. Goodbye Angels
06. Sick Love
07. Go Robot
08. Feasting on the Flowers
09. Detroit
10. This Ticonderoga
11. Encore
12. The Hunter
13. Dreams of a Samurai