|
THE GRIP WEEDS
Giant on the Beach
(Rainbow Quartz)
US release date: 2 November 2004
UK release date: Available as import
by Hank Kalet
The Grip Weeds wear their influences like badges
of honor.
The New Jersey band plays the kind of jangly, space-age
rock perfected by bands like the Zombies, Love, and the Quicksilver
Messenger Service. There are elements of the Byrds circa "Eight
Miles High" or The Notorious Byrd Brothers, Revolver-era
Beatles, and San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury bands. Start with
the heavy reliance on lush harmonies, mix in acoustic and electric
guitars (complete with backward playing and some Coltrane-esque
twisting solos), an insistent rhythm track, and ethereal lyrics,
and the listener could easily believe himself lost in a time warp.
All of this is intentional, of course. It begins
with the CD art, its giant genie front image and psychedelic paisley
inside. There are several band photos washed over with the photographic
equivalent of reverb, a swirl of right colors that play off the
vintage '60s clothing worn by the band. And then there's the band's
name, based on Sgt. Gripweed, John Lennon's character in the mid-'60s
film How I Won the War.
The Grip Weeds' newest CD, Giant on the Beach, creates
a different world for the listener, from the opening strands of
the disc -- a spacey bit of synthesizer that swirls into a very
far-Eastern-sounding guitar line, which in turn gives way to aggressive
guitars -- through to the final cut, "Get By", which opens
with a driving chord progression that sounds like a cross between
"Ohio" and a toned-down Deep Purple riff, before sliding
into another Beatles-esque vocal.
For the most part, this alternate universe offers
a lot of pleasure. Few bands out there now have the musical knowledge
or self-confidence to try to rescue a musical style that is fast
fading into the dustbins of classic rock radio. First, you
have to have the chops to make this kind of homage work, and the
Grip Weeds do. Kurt Reil has an explosive drum technique that propels
the music, drives it ahead. His partner in rhythm, bassist Michael
Kelly, lends a thick bottom to the music, keeping it grounded. On
top of this foundation, guitarists Rick Reil -- Kurt's brother --
and Kristin Pinelli spin musical gold, supplying snaking solos and
intricate fills, creating a musical mise en scene.
On songs like "Waiting for a Sign", everything
comes together and, somehow, from within this tightly controlled
environment the band manages to create something fresh and modern.
Equally powerful are those songs -- like the delightful "Sight
Unseen", which is pure Byrds, or the simple acoustic declaration
"Give Me Some of Your Ways" -- on which the band dispenses
with all pretensions and just revels in its '60s fixation.
Giant on the Beach, however, is not without
its flaws -- and they are a direct by-product of its strengths.
While the band's '60s fixation results in some shimmering musical
textures, it has left too many of the songs lyrically weak, too
often a mix of vague cliches and undeveloped images that lead nowhere.
There is a fine line between simplicity and simple.
Simplicity implies a depth of emotion presented in a straightforward
fashion, lacking any pretension, while the simple lacks that depth
and slides too easily into cliché. "Astral Man",
which swirls with musical energy, is held back by a formulaic mysticism
-- "I've got to wake up on this Earth / Back where I was before
my birth / I'm going round and round again until I learn / I'm an
astral man" -- that plagues too many of the songs on the disc.
On the other hand, the lyrics to "I Believe"
have an almost Zen-like austerity, a simplicity that somehow augments
their power. "I believe in something", Rick Reil sings,
"Yeah, there is no doubt / Though my mind's resisting / I'm
gonna find out / If I could only find a bridge to a world outside
me now / If I could only find a bridge / Then I'd get back somehow".
The song is ecstatic, fervent, Rick Reil driving it with a "Drive
My Car"-like riff, repeating it, the percussion (hand claps,
etc.) and vox organ pushing the rhythm, Pinelli's mid-song solo
slicing though it all. It's a song that can make you believe in
the project that the Grip Weeds have set for themselves, a project
of positivity straight from another time.
7 January 2005
|
|