Pop Music

By Providence Journal Arts Writer Rick Massimo

Maybe he should have worked on it a little longer

4:41 PM Thu, Nov 20, 2008 |
Rick Massimo    Email

Jon Pareles at the New York Times is not crazy about Chinese Democracy, the 17-years-in-the-making Guns N' Roses record (really, an Axl Rose record) that really looks this time like it'll come out on Sunday:

"Chinese Democracy" (Geffen) is the Titanic of rock albums: the ship, not the movie, although like the film it's a monumental studio production. It's outsize, lavish, obsessive, technologically advanced and, all too clearly, the end of an era. It's also a shipwreck, capsized by pretensions and top-heavy production. In its 14 songs there are glimpses of heartfelt ferocity and despair, along with bursts of remarkable musicianship. But they are overwhelmed by countless layers of studio diddling and a tone of curdled self-pity. The album concludes with five bombastic power ballads in a row.

"Chinese Democracy" sounds like a loud last gasp from the reign of the indulged pop star: the kind of musician whose blockbuster early success could once assure loyal audiences, bountiful royalties, escalating ambitions and dangerously open-ended deadlines. The leaner, leakier 21st-century recording business is far less likely to nurture such erratic perfectionists.

...

For years Mr. Rose has been tagged the Howard Hughes of rock, as his manager at the time was already complaining in 2001. That didn't have to be a bad thing; estrangement and obsession have spawned great songs. But "Chinese Democracy," though it's a remarkable artifact of excess, is a letdown. Mr. Rose's version of Guns N' Roses, with sidemen he can fire rather than partners, leaves his worst impulses unchecked.

I gotta say it sounds fascinating, though that doesn't guarantee it won't be awful:

For years Mr. Rose has been tagged the Howard Hughes of rock, as his manager at the time was already complaining in 2001. That didn't have to be a bad thing; estrangement and obsession have spawned great songs. But "Chinese Democracy," though it's a remarkable artifact of excess, is a letdown. Mr. Rose's version of Guns N' Roses, with sidemen he can fire rather than partners, leaves his worst impulses unchecked.

...

Some of the album's best moments are its intros. Flaunting what time and money can accomplish, there are gratuitous ear grabbers like an a cappella vocal chorale in "Scraped," a siren matched by a siren swoop of Mr. Rose's voice in "Chinese Democracy" and the narrow-band, filtered beginning of "Better." That track goes on to hurtle across so much of what Guns N' Roses does well -- from steel-clawed hard-rock riffs to metallic reggae-rock to arena-anthem melodies -- that it almost makes up for the whininess and lazy "-tion" rhymes of the underlying song. "If the World" opens with acoustic guitar lines suggesting a Middle Eastern oud but segues into wah-wah rhythm guitar and sustained strings fit for a blaxploitation soundtrack, while Mr. Rose unleashes something like a soul falsetto.

Say what you will, you know you wanna hear it.

social bookmarking


Leave a comment





Type the characters you see in the picture above.