Death, embezzlement, nervous breakdowns โ the first half of the Charlatansโ career alone packed in enough incident to send most bands fleeing for a desk in the Civil Service. If things have taken a more surreal turn recently, with drummer Jon Brooksโ unscheduled onstage appearance with Franz Ferdinand, and Tim Burgessโ role in light-hearted supergroup The Chavs (with Primal Screamโs Duffy, Carl Barat and Andy Burrows from Razorlight), think of it as therapy.
Having resolved their internal squabbles with 2001โs career best Wonderland, The Charlatans have clearly decided that if theyโre stuck with each other, they might as well enjoy themselves. Gone, then, is the feisty if predictable Charlies-rock of 2004โs Up At The Lake. Instead, their ninth studio album is a sprawling mix of dub, loose-limbed boogie and weirdo guitar-pop which will leave newer converts scratching their heads and fans of 1994โs bleak third album, Up To Our Hips, reaching for the Rizlaโs.
Opener โBlackened Blue Eyesโ is a reminder that when they do funky, bar-room rock, thereโs no-one to match them, and Tim Burgessโ voice is ever more an instrument of hope and resilience on lyrics like, โWe all need a shoulder to cry on/Once in a while.โ But after that, you can almost hear the rulebook flying from the studio window. A choir of rampaging Cossacks invade the chorus of The Specials-influenced โCity Of The Deadโ. โSunset & Vineโ is a synth-heavy Moroder-like soundscape, and mid-tempo skank โMuddy Groundโ relocates The Stonesโ โWaiting On A Friendโ to a windswept Glastonbury Tor. The ever-present whiff of Camberwell Carrot, meanwhile, reaches a pungent peak on creditable dub-plate โThe Architectโ โ a nod, presumably, to paranoiacโs favourite The Matrix.
Talk of Simpatico as the bandโs Sandinista, is, in truth, wide of the mark. Itโs better seen as a footpath linking the claustrophobia of their early work with the Black Country funk of Wonderland, whilst hinting at a way forward for this most durable and eclectic of bands. As Burgess sings gleefully in the raunchy punk-funk of โNYC (No Need To Stop)โ, โWeโre not here to educate/Only here to stay up late!โ The Walsall pact remains inviolable.
By Paul Moody