Logo
DiS Needs You: Save our site »
  • Logo_home2
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • In Photos
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Search
  • Community
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • Blog
  • Community

THIS SITE HAS BEEN ARCHIVED AND CLOSED.

Please join the conversation over on our new forums »

If you really want to read this, try using The Internet Archive.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Gold Lion

Label: Fiction Release Date: 20/03/2006

12987
John_Brainlove by John Brainlove March 20th, 2006

Seems like most of the great new guitar bands from that massive tidal wave a couple of years ago got washed up after their first album. Interpol's second album turned out to be a yawnfest with only two or three songs I can even remember now. The Strokes keep rehashing the same formula for ever decreasing returns, their sound getting as flabby as their 20-something beer bellies. The White Stripes seem to interminably flog the same horse, with even the tiniest deviation from their formula being hailed as some kind of major reinvention.

And now the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have sadly continued the trend. I really dislike their new single, Gold Lion - it is, depressingly, a tiresome piece of strummy FM trash with abstruse words and declawed kick-arse sections that completely fail to kick even one bit of any arse. This saddens me, more than I thought it would. I totally fell in love with Fever To Tell, after a shaky start. There's a sort of vulnerability, desperation and sadness that runs through it like an internal narrative, but also this huge, bursting enthusiasm that you see when Miss O is running around on stage with that huge grin plastered all over her face. There music was always very naked in that way, like there's always some real feeling bubbling very close to the surface, about to burst through. And when you combine all that with the ace tunes, the stunning clothes, the unstoppable effervescence, and the personality cult thing, it's a pretty potent mixture. But if you remove any one of those elements, it suffers. And they have lost the tunes, and the investment of emotion, and therefore the genuine-ness - and with those crucial elements missing, their appeal collapses like a house of cards. It's like when Patrick Wolf retreated into symbolism on his second record, and I found myself searching for his fingerprints in the music and finding distant ideas, stories and sketches instead. When they start to give you less, you notice, if that's what you're attuned to.

And the whole of Show Your Bones sounds the same, bar one or two songs. They have smoothed everything over and sanded everything down. It's not a positive evolution. That said, I thought the same about Fever To Tell when it first appeared compared to the first EP (and all the accompanying scratchy bootleg live versions - I still think the BBC session version 'Tick' is the definitive version). Maybe their trajectory from skronky guitar fuzz to FM friendly melodic strummery just got a little too steep this time.

Pack your bags. Grit your teeth. It's time to fall out of love.

  • 2
    John Brainlove's Score
Log-in to rate this record out of 10
Share on
   
Love DiS? Become a Patron of the site here »


LATEST


  • Drowned in Sound's Albums of the Year 2025


  • Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024


  • Drowned in Sound is back!


  • Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Year: 2020


  • Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter


  • Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing



Left-arrow

Goldfrapp

Ride A White Horse

Mobback
12617
12616

Mendeed

This War Will Last Forever

Mobforward
Right-arrow


LATEST

    news


    Drowned in Sound's Albums of the Year 2025

  • 106149
  • news


    Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024

  • 106145

    news


    Drowned in Sound is back!

  • 106143
  • news


    Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Y...

  • 106141

    news


    Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter

  • 106139
  • Playlist


    Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing

  • 106138

    Festival Preview


    Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alterna...

  • 106137
  • Interview


    A Different Kind Of Weird: dEUS on The Ideal Crash

  • 106136
MORE


GREATEST HITS

    review


    Sharon van Etten - Are We There

  • 95658
  • Playlist


    Playlist: Summertime Sadness

  • 100688

    feature


    Portishead discuss Third

  • 34958
  • feature


    Foals: "We're going to get weirder and weirder"

  • 26160

    review


    Biffy Clyro - Only Revolutions

  • 55003
  • review


    Coldplay - Ghost Stories

  • 95631

    news


    An Open Letter to Ryan Adams

  • 14604
  • Playlist


    Our Favourite Tracks of Q1 2015

  • 99412
MORE

Drowned in Sound
  • DROWNED IN SOUND
  • HOME
  • SITE MAP
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • IN PHOTOS
  • RECORDS
  • RECOMMENDED RECORDS
  • ALBUMS OF THE YEAR
  • FESTIVAL COVERAGE
  • COMMUNITY
  • MUSIC FORUM
  • SOCIAL BOARD
  • REPORT ERRORS
  • CONTACT US
  • JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
  • FOLLOW DiS
  • GOOGLE+
  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • SHUFFLER
  • TUMBLR
  • YOUTUBE
  • RSS FEED
  • RSS EMAIL SUBSCRIBE
  • MISC
  • TERM OF USE
  • PRIVACY
  • ADVERTISING
  • OUR WIKIPEDIA
© 2000-2025 DROWNED IN SOUND