
"My idle hands/ they're the devil's play things," Mark Lanegan sings on "Idle Hands," packing all the energy you'd expect from two nineties icons. Fittingly enough, Lanegan and his musical partner Greg Dulli have found much to do with their hands over the past couple of decades. They've made amazing music (Dulli with the Afghan Whigs and Twilight Singers; Lanegan with Screaming Trees, as a solo artist, and in collaborations with Queens of the Stone Age, Isobel Campbell, Soulsavers, and the Twilight Singers). They've both battled and exorcised their demons, and even spent some time in, well, the gutter. Thus, the
Gutter Twins seems a rather sufficient title for their first full-length collaboration.

At times, it seems hard to imagine how these two could be so close. Lanegan comes off as a quiet soul - his voice is deep and haunting, and on-stage he barely moves, and never speaks, only opening his mouth to sing. Dulli on the other hand is boisterous, blending a seemingly impossible concoction of machismo and flamboyance. Their voices are not at all similar, yet together they create something intense and powerful. There is a darkness and a sadness in their voices that always comes through. Lanegan with his constant use of religious imagery seems to be in search of salvation. Dulli always seems conflicted about his own masculinity. Both seem to be fighting off their vices. But with that also comes the sound of survival. Dulli and Lanegan's survival exists on multiple levels - both gained notoriety in the nineties grunge era, yet they have continued to make strong work, while their contemporaries have fallen off the map. Despite their vices, both have survived through addiction while many of their counterparts did not. All comes through in
Saturnalia - a record that triumphs in its darkness.
"Oh heaven/ it's quite a climb," Lanegan sings on "Seven Stories Underground," one of many songs that invokes religion. Lanegan previously invoked the theme of religious salvation on his 2007 collaboration with SoulSavers,
It's Now How Far You Fall, It's the Way You Land. Opener "The Stations" introduces these religious themes:
I hear the rapture's coming, they say he'll be here soon
Right now there's demons crawling all around my room
They say he lives within us, they say for me he died
And now I hear his footsteps almost every night
Thankfully, the duo never stray into "Chrsitian rock" territory, but still do maintain a listening experience that is a bit spiritual.
I would not suggest this as a starting point if you are not too familiar with either's work. For that, I would steer you towards Lanegan's
Bubblegum and the Twilight Singers'
Blackberry Belle. For those who are familiar,
Saturnalia is another great chapter in what has been two amazing musical careers.
MP3 - "
Idle Hands"
1 comment:
Yay, thanks for the listen! I have been exceedingly curious to hear this album. It sounds pretty strong.
Post a Comment