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Breathe
Midnight Oil
A CD Review |
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What do you get when you take a band from Australia
who was used to playing beach bars in their early years, a band
known for their pounding, rhythmic bass lines as well as political
messages in their lyrics, and then add a little country feel? You
get a CD called "Breathe" and it's from the band Midnight
Oil.
I guess what I liked most about "Breathe" as I listened
to it was it was different. My first couple of listens were mostly
background music while I was working, and I didn't pay attention to
the lyrics too much. What I heard at this point in time was a sound
that really didn't relay to most anything I've heard on the radio
lately. There was a good beat and some catchy lines that I picked up
on. It didn't fit the mold of one-hit-wonder bands getting a lot of
the radio-play, it wasn't a "metal" feeling band, and as
much as there was a country feel on some of the songs, I highly
doubt I'd be hearing those songs on my local country station playing
those country hits being plowed through as much as the
one-hit-wonder alternative songs. This was different, this was kinda
cool. And then I started reading the lyrics.
I'll be honest, I really don't know how the music part of this CD
fits in with the older Midnight Oil material. I've read it's
similar, but from seeing their live show, this CD doesn't have as
much of that "punk" feel that some of their other songs
seem to have - I guess that's caused mostly by some of the slower
songs, "One Too Many Times" and "Home," but
where I could see the younger generation in a mosh pit during some
of their older songs, I don't see them out of control listening to
"Breathe." It might turn off a fan or two, but it might
pick up three or four more in their place. But, music aside, what I
did find is that the lyrics have much of that same political/fight
the power/there's hope if we make it messages they've been known for
in the past. With lines like "If we surrender ourselves to
industrial rules, we'll wake up in the wreckage of tomorrow"
from "Common Ground," "Where is the town that we
lived in brother, where are the sounds of the church bell sister,
now is the time to heal" from "Time to Heal," and
"Here comes the angel of death, you may not remember her yet,
concrete all over her face, she's the child of the human race"
from "Bring on the Change." Put it this way, if they
aren't writing songs with some kind of meaning it's really odd that
their songs end up that way.
I guess I like "Breathe" because it is different. I
sort of mixes many of my musical tastes all into one CD - there's a
little industrial edge, there's a little rock, there's a little
country. I'm not sure how they pulled it off, but somehow, Midnight
Oil did.
Thirteen tracks of which I like ten of them ain't too bad. With
that, I give Midnight Oil's "Breathe" a 77% on the E-Ave
Listenability Scale.
That's it for this one, I'm The Dude on the Right. L8R!! |