
Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ newest member takes a dark solo turn.
Imaad Wasif - Imaad WasifPosted by Editorial Intern on 30-May-06 @ 02:04 PM
[3/5] Imaad Wasif's name may not ring a bell, but most of the bands he's been associated with should: Lowercase, alaska!, the New Folk Implosion, and now, Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Here, Wasif has stepped out on his own and made a stripped-down ode to disappointment, deception and most everything else that leads to anguish; and, as Wasif describes it halfway through the album, "Holding on to the blade/I'm leaving, baby." The music follows suit, traveling down a dark, lonely and mysterious path (at its best, traces of Red House Painters can be heard lurking about), but it has a hard time hitting the kind of peaks required to make a singer-songwriter disc truly memorable. Wasif gets extra points for avoiding clichés and making something that never sounds forced (even when he's delivering rote lines like "You can always find a friend/to hurt you when you're down"), but in the end, these 11 songs would work best as the background music for a movie without a happy ending.
(KILL ROCK STARS) Marc Hawthorne
Official Website: http://www.killrockstars.com
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Also in this issue:
- Built To Spill
- The Dresden Dolls
- Elefant
- Grandaddy
- Rainer Maria
- The Rakes
- Rock Kills Kid
- The Secret Machines
- Brandtson
- Crime In Stereo
- Eastern Youth
- Punchline
- The Riverboat Gamblers
- Time Again
- U.S. Bombs
- Year Future
- Mr. Nogatco AKA Kool Keith
- Mono
- Sao Paulo Underground
- Spank Rock
- The Streets
- Hank Williams III
- Zombi
- Aloha
- Crystal Skulls
- Kimya Dawson
- Elf Power
- Islands
- The Like Young
- Starlight Mints
- Dead To Fall
- Dysrhythmia
- FacedownInShit
- Ministry
- Protest The Hero
- The Sainte Catherines
- Venom
- Thursday
- None More Black
- Rye Coalition
- Saves The Day
- Sick Of It All
- Pretty Girls Make Graves
- Eagles Of Death Metal
- The Coup
- Other sections...


























[3/5] Imaad Wasif's name may not ring a bell, but most of the bands he's been associated with should: Lowercase, alaska!, the New Folk Implosion, and now, Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Here, Wasif has stepped out on his own and made a stripped-down ode to disappointment, deception and most everything else that leads to anguish; and, as Wasif describes it halfway through the album, "Holding on to the blade/I'm leaving, baby." The music follows suit, traveling down a dark, lonely and mysterious path (at its best, traces of Red House Painters can be heard lurking about), but it has a hard time hitting the kind of peaks required to make a singer-songwriter disc truly memorable. Wasif gets extra points for avoiding clichés and making something that never sounds forced (even when he's delivering rote lines like "You can always find a friend/to hurt you when you're down"), but in the end, these 11 songs would work best as the background music for a movie without a happy ending.
(KILL ROCK STARS) Marc Hawthorne
Official Website: 
