I think the black keys have a very good beat to their music & it gets an old timer like me (67) get up & dance
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I think the black keys have a very good beat to their music & it gets an old timer like me (67) get up & dance
What a surprise! These guys are awesome!
The maturation of the Black Keys as record makers and performers has been both subtle and startling. With their 2008 Nonesuch release ‘Attack & Release’ – the fifth album of their eight-year career which doubled the sales of their previous album and Nonesuch debut ‘Magic Potion’ – guitarist Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney illustrated the durability of their few-frills sound, a mysterious and heavy brew of seventies-vintage rock, classic R&B and timeless, downhearted blues. Producer and pal Danger Mouse, their first outside collaborator, didn't try to reinvent their sound but further isolated its essence with the help of a few carefully chosen guest players and some retro-modern electronic gear. It didn't need to get slicker to get better, or, as the Boston Globe put it, ''Attack & Release' proves that cleaning up the boys still won't stop them from tracking mud all over the house.'
Danger Mouse returned to co-produce ‘Tighten Up’ on ‘Brothers,’ but for the most part, the duo was on its own, spending ten days at the legendary Muscle Shoals studio in Alabama and coming up with the an even more intensely focused, deeply soulful set that includes a cover of Jerry Butler's ‘Never Gonna Give You Up.’ The performances are inventive and impassioned: Auerbach extends his vocal range to falsetto on the lead-off track ‘Everlasting Light’ and ‘The Only One’; ‘Howlin’ For You' opens with a Gary Glitter-style drum riff and the chorus practically invites singing along. The tunes offer a surprising amount of lyrical candor and more than a little dark humor; the grooves alternate between ballsy swagger and bluesy rumination. The album reflects where Auerbach and Carney have been lately, most recently collaborating with a who's who of New York City MC's, including RZA, Q Tip, Mos Def and Raekwon on the 2009 BlakRoc super-session organized by hip-hop impresario and Black Keys fan Damon Dash. They've also pursued projects on their own, Auerbach with his solo ‘Keep It Hid’ album and tour, Carney with his band Drummer and its debut disc, ‘Feels Good Together.’ Their maturation didn't happen just in the studio, though. Carney admits, ‘Dan and I grew up a lot as individuals and musicians prior to making this album. Our relationship was tested in many ways but at the end of the day, we're brothers, and I think these songs reflect that.’
‘Brothers’ was primarily cut in Muscle Shoals, a setting that turned out to have more in common with the Akron, Ohio factories where the Black Keys used to record. The place was desolate, the town depressed, so once again the duo slipped into a world all its own. They did additional recording at Auerbach's Easy Eye Sound System in Akron and The Bunker in Brooklyn. The album was mixed by engineer Tchad Blake, a veteran of sessions with Los Lobos, Pearl Jam and Peter Gabriel. Says Carney, ‘The way he approaches mixing is the same way we approach making music. Respecting the past while being in the present.’
Review
Retreating from the hazy Danger Mouse-fueled pot dream of Attack &
Release, the Black Keys headed down to the legendary Muscle Shoals, recording
their third album on their own and dubbing it Brothers. The studio, not to
mention the artwork patterned after such disregarded Chess psychedelic-era
relics as This Is Howlin’ Wolf’s New Album, are good indications that the
tough blues band of the Black Keys earliest records is back, but the group
hasn't forgotten what they've learned in their inwardly psychedelic mid-period.
Brothers still can get mighty trippy – the swirling chintzy organ that
circles “The Only One,” the Baroque harpsichord flair of “Too Afraid to
Love You” – but the album is built with blood and dirt, so its wilder
moments remain gritty without being earthbound. Sonically, that scuffed-up
spaciness – the open air created by the fuzz guitars and phasing, analog
keyboards, and cavernous drums – is considerably appealing, but the Black
Keys' ace in the hole remains the exceptional songwriting that Dan Auerbach and
Patrick Carney are so good at. They twist a Gary Glitter stomp into swamp fuzz
blues, steal a title from Archie Bell & the Drells but never reference that
classic Tighten Up groove, and approximate a slow ‘60s soul crawl on
“Unknown Brother” before following it up with a version of Jerry Butler’s
“Never Gonna Give You Up,” and it’s nearly impossible to tell which is
the cover. And that’s the great thing about the Black Keys in general and
Brothers in particular: the past and present intermingle so thoroughly that they
blur, yet there’s no affect, just three hundred pounds of joy. Stephen
Thomas Erlewine – Allmusic.com
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