Broken Bells: After the Disco – review

(Columbia)

Of late, pop music has been dominated by solo artists, superstar producers and their collaborations, in which the word "featuring" features prominently and which often seem to be more about maximising brand synergy than aesthetic simpatico. Bands are, if not quite dead, then hanging on to the coat-tails of this zeitgeist.

If the point is easily contested – big rock outfits such as Kings of Leon routinely sell out arenas; producers have long acted as creatives and disparate voices have long duetted – the trend is still there. Witness 2013's bestselling singles and albums charts, or the BBC's Sound of 2014 longlist, with its roster of singers-for-hire. Even the token rock act, Royal Blood, are a duo: lighter on their feet and more easily managed than four or five surly dudes.

Music-making is now a "project" that generates "material", – or "content" for your iTunes dashboard – and few have been more adept at swimming through these quicksilver waters than Brian Burton. He gets around, fruitfully. Known mostly by his producerly alias, Danger Mouse, he was in Gnarls Barkley, the soul'n'B duo with Cee-Lo Green that hit big with Crazy (2006). Latterly, alongside producing landmark albums for Gorillaz and the Black Keys, and forthcoming records by U2 and Frank Ocean, he has made up half of Broken Bells with James Mercer of the Shins, the band credited with bringing indie guitar music out of American college dormitories in the 00s.

Broken Bells' first album has sold just under 700,000 to date; After the Disco reprises this mellow pop partnership, in which guitars and melodies come augmented by just-so producerly touches. Broadly, it's about the morning after the night before, when you wake up and face your responsibilities. After the Disco's really not a bad record at all – bittersweet, full of clever earworms and knowledgable references, and better than their last one. Unlike the fleeting couplings of convenience that over-populate the pop arena, these guys clearly spend time together; they even thought up a name, rather than "Danger Mouse feat James Mercer". Their middle eights are sweetly Beatley; Theremins burble, and shakers shake. This is not David Guetta feat Sia.

Technically, A Perfect World begins the album before the disco era starts, with a Kraftwerk tribute that revs up into catchy motorik pop. With its Bee Gees falsettos, the single, Holding on for Life, is as high-disco-meets-80s as you could ask for, a pastiche that is probably designed to throw the meat'n'potatoes tendency among Shins fans into a lather. The rest is full of nicely turned thirtysomething concerns expressed in retro-pop idiom; Control discusses how change is the only constant in life.

Burton has mentioned Czech synth pioneer Jan "Miami Vice" Hammer as a touchstone here; Broken Bells must have wilted a little when Daft Punk released Random Access Memories, which has that old-methods, sci-fi discoid feel, but on a much grander, Grammy-scooping scale. It could be the result of studying Burton's catalogue too assiduously, but Leave it Alone actually sounds a little like the Black Keys, adding to the feeling of faintly promiscuous cultural overlap that hovers over After the Disco.

Although the melodies and rhythms keep coming – No Matter What You're Told is particularly nicely turned psych-pop – the second half of the record tails off. By track 10 you're drumming your fingers at the same features that sounded so good earlier: the philosophical touches, the classy warmth of Burton's choice of instruments or Mercer's choice of words. There is no sense of impulsion here; you don't get the feeling that this record just poured out of its makers. It might not be the craven product of a marketing meeting, but it sounds like two talented, successful guys making nice tunes, no less, no more.

Contributor

Kitty Empire

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Broken Bells: After the Disco – review
The second collaboration between Danger Mouse and the Shins's James Mercer is a decent, studied genre piece, but not much more, writes Paul MacInnes

Paul MacInnes

30, Jan, 2014 @9:30 PM

Article image
Broken Bells: Into the Blue review – an absorbing journey
Danger Mouse’s stellar beats suit James Mercer’s uneasy vocals better than ever on the duo’s often dazzling third album

Damien Morris

09, Oct, 2022 @2:00 PM

Broken Bells: Broken Bells | CD review
Danger Mouse and his new pal take the country road to utopia, writes Hermione Hoby

Hermione Hoby

07, Mar, 2010 @12:09 AM

The Shins: Port of Morrow – review
The first album by the Shins' new line-up is typically bookish and melodic, if a little clinical, writes Ally Carnwath

Ally Carnwath

18, Mar, 2012 @12:04 AM

Article image
Norah Jones: Little Broken Hearts – review

Demure Norah Jones wields an iron fist inside a kid glove on her new album, writes Kitty Empire

Kitty Empire

28, Apr, 2012 @11:05 PM

Article image
Exclusive video: Broken Bells - Ghost Inside

Mad Men's Christina Hendricks stars in the new video for Danger Mouse and James Mercer's side project

01, Jun, 2010 @2:25 PM

School of Seven Bells: Ghostory – review
The loss of one member and a ghostly concept theme cannot detract from School of Seven Bells' fantastic sound, writes Hermione Hoby

Hermione Hoby

26, Feb, 2012 @12:05 AM

Article image
Broken Bells: Holding On For Life - live performance video

Broken Bells, singer and guitarist James Mercer and producer and musician Danger Mouse, perform an exclusive live version of their new single

Thibaut Remy, Andy Gallagher and Richard Sprenger

25, Nov, 2013 @9:30 AM

Article image
Sleigh Bells: Treats | CD review

US hipsters Sleigh Bells have made a debut album noisy enough to silence the critics, says Gareth Grundy

Gareth Grundy

07, Aug, 2010 @11:02 PM

Danger Mouse & Daniele Luppi: Rome – review
Five years in the making, Danger Mouse's first attempt at a spaghetti western soundtrack lacks character, writes Killian Fox

Killian Fox

14, May, 2011 @11:05 PM