
Art-blues legends happily tear us a new one.
Oxbow - The Narcotic Story
[4/5] You may shudder; you may smile nervously; but you don't walk away from an Oxbow performance without feeling something. And while you can thank frontman Eugene Robinson-a 200-plus-pound mass of tattooed, street-fighter id who routinely strips naked (literally and psychologically) over the course of any given set-for some of what you may be "feeling," the band's music also has a way of getting under your skin and itching. A noise-damaged art-blues powerhouse with the force of a turbine engine and the spatial consideration of a Bartók quartet, Oxbow have been refining their idiosyncratic attack since 1990; and on The Narcotic Story, they cut deeper and sound more relevant than any band this long in the tooth have a right to. Robinson, as always, doesn't sing so much as he negotiates and pummels the spaces between notes; and while he's got incredible backing in guitarist Niko Wenner and the alternately spacious and explosive rhythm section of Dan Adams (bass) and Greg Davis (drums), Robinson also finds added dramatic support in piano and strings (see the harrowing "Down A Stair Backward" and "Frank's Frolic"). Though it clocks in at 45 minutes, The Narcotic Story may feel longer for less-patient listeners, thanks to the quiet expanses and seeming false endings Oxbow use to build toward a climax (see the album standout "A Winner Every Time"). But the payoff is worth waiting for-even if the terror behind it translates better in the live arena, where fast-forwarding is not an option. (HYDRA HEAD) Aaron BurgessROCKS LIKE: The Capricorns' Ruder Forms Survive Harvey Milk's Courtesy And Good Will Toward Men Rope's Heresy, And Then Nothing But Tears Official Website: http://www.hydrahead.com
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Also in this issue:
- Paramore
- The Toasters
- Tiger Army
- Amber Pacific
- Clorox Girls
- The Copyrights
- The Ergs!
- Filthy Thieving Bastards
- The Last Of The Bad Men
- Scott & Aimee
- Seven Storey Mountain
- Rocky Votolato
- Acute
- Birds Of Avalon
- Fields
- Handsome Furs
- Waking Ashland
- The National
- Robbers On High Street
- Voxtrot
- Wooden Wand
- Pelican
- A Perfect Murder
- Black Light Burns
- Career Suicide
- Hopesfall
- Bad Brains
- Irepress
- Pig Destroyer
- Pissed Jeans
- Porcupine Tree
- Queens Of The Stone Age
- The Fold
- 1997
- Ryan Adams
- The Automatic Automatic
- Bleed The Dream
- The Dear Hunter
- The Icarus Line
- Straylight Run
- Omar Rodriguez-Lopez
- Cadence Weapon
- Dalek/Haze XXL
- Junkie XL
- The Secret Handshake
- Amir Sulaiman
- Other sections...


























[4/5] You may shudder; you may smile nervously; but you don't walk away from an Oxbow performance without feeling something. And while you can thank frontman Eugene Robinson-a 200-plus-pound mass of tattooed, street-fighter id who routinely strips naked (literally and psychologically) over the course of any given set-for some of what you may be "feeling," the band's music also has a way of getting under your skin and itching. A noise-damaged art-blues powerhouse with the force of a turbine engine and the spatial consideration of a Bartók quartet, Oxbow have been refining their idiosyncratic attack since 1990; and on The Narcotic Story, they cut deeper and sound more relevant than any band this long in the tooth have a right to. Robinson, as always, doesn't sing so much as he negotiates and pummels the spaces between notes; and while he's got incredible backing in guitarist Niko Wenner and the alternately spacious and explosive rhythm section of Dan Adams (bass) and Greg Davis (drums), Robinson also finds added dramatic support in piano and strings (see the harrowing "Down A Stair Backward" and "Frank's Frolic"). Though it clocks in at 45 minutes, The Narcotic Story may feel longer for less-patient listeners, thanks to the quiet expanses and seeming false endings Oxbow use to build toward a climax (see the album standout "A Winner Every Time"). But the payoff is worth waiting for-even if the terror behind it translates better in the live arena, where fast-forwarding is not an option. (HYDRA HEAD) Aaron Burgess
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