The Black Keys
found unexpected success with their 2010 breakthrough album Brothers,
which earned the duo of Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney three Grammy® Awards.
While Brothers’ mix of psychedelic-tinged blues, rock, and soul music
struck a chord with listeners, the album’s hit single, the groove-fattened
“Tighten Up”, became ubiquitous, blasting from TV sets and radios across the
fruited plains.
The Black Keys have delivered a fast follow-up to
Brothers in the form of El Camino, a solid collection that draws
upon its predecessor’s timeless mix of styles with a pure-at-heart blast of
retro-soul and rock ‘n’ roll. Unlike the band’s previous collaboration with
producer Danger Mouse, 2008’s Attack & Release, which experimented in
lofty sonic atmospherics, there are no loose musical threads here. Instead,
El Camino hits fast-and-hard with inspiration that spans the decades, the
Black Keys turbo-charging their trademark garage-blues sound with elements of
soul, electric funk, and punch-drunk throwback rock ‘n’ roll.
El Camino
cranks from the jump with lead single “Lonely Boy,” which sports a riff-happy
melodic hook every bit as large and in charge as that on “Tighten Up.”
Auerbach’s slightly-echoed vocals are overwhelmed by the song’s dangerously
infectious sing-along chorus and Carney’s propulsive drumbeats. Infusing a
bedrock of rock ‘n’ soul with a maddeningly effective recurring riff and plenty
of engaging “whoa whoa whoa,” the song will stick in your brain long after
you’ve heard it, like some funky brain chigger.
You’ll find no
creative drop-off from the radio-friendly peaks of “Lonely Boy,”
El Camino rolling through its eleven songs in a shockingly efficient
38-minutes, leaving the listener gasping for breath and wanting another taste.
The martial rhythms of “Dead and Gone” belie the song’s melodic R&B
heartbeat, while “Little Black Submarines” is a Zeppelin-styled folk-rock ballad
with melancholy vocals and elegant, atmospheric fretwork. “Money Maker” is a
raucous blues-rock stomp with muscular rhythms while “Nova Baby” revisits the
retro-soul vibe of the opening track with a gorgeously melody and sticky chorus.
The Black Keys have come a long way from their three-chord
garage-blues origins as an ersatz ‘Rust Belt’ White Stripes doppelganger,
finding their own voice in a high-octane blend of styles that is as classic as
it is contemporary. (Nonesuch Records, released October 12, 2011)
Review originally published by Blues Revue magazine, 2012
Buy the CD from Amazon:
The Black Keys’ El Camino
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