-
- Interpol
- f. 1998, New York City
db. - not yet -
Rock, Indie Rock
Turn on the Bright Lights
/ Aug 20, 2002 / Labels 





(1)
Untitled
(2) Obstacle 1
(3) NYC
(4) PDA
(5) Say Hello to the Angels
(6) Hands Away
(7) Obstacle 2
(8) Stella Was a Diver and She Was Always Down
(9) The New
(10) Leif Erikson

- One might go into a review like this one
wondering how many words will pass before Joy Division is brought up. In
this case, the answer is 16. Many are too quick to classify Interpol as
mimics and lose out on discovering that little more than an allusion is
being made. The music made by both bands explores the vast space between
black and white and produces something pained, deftly penetrating, and
beautiful. Save for a couple vocal tics, that's where the obvious
parallels end. The other fleeting comparisons one can one whip up when
talking about Interpol are several — roughly the same amount that can be
conjured when talking about any other guitar/drums/vocals band formed
since the '90s. So, sure enough, one could play the similarity game with
this record all day and bring up a pile of bands. It could be a
detrimental thing to do, especially when this record is so spellbinding
and doesn't deserve to be mottled with such bilge. However, this record is
a special case; slaying the albatross this band has been unfairly
strangled by is urgent and key. Let's: there's another Manchester band at
the heart of "Say Hello to the Angels," but that heart is
bookended by a beginning and end that approaches the agitated squall of
Fugazi; the torchy, elegiac "Leif Erikson" plays out like a
missing scene from the Afghan Whigs' Gentlemen; the upper-register
refrain near the close of "Obstacle 1" channels Shudder to Think.
This record is no fun at all, the tension is rarely resolved, and — oh
no! — it isn't exactly revolutionary, though some new shades of gray
have been discovered. But you shouldn't allow your perception to be fogged
by such considerations when someone has just done it for you and, most
importantly, when all this brilliance is waiting to overwhelm you.
-
- by Andy Kellman
-
- Copyright © 2004 by Dennis Vihar and
DeViCom. All Rights Reserved.
Date: 06. Jan 05