Genre: Space Rock
Label Number: SPV 085-69432 CD
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.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2004 SPV, Steamhammer Records
AllMusic Review by John Serba
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2004 SPV, Steamhammer Records
AllMusic Review by John Serba
"Wyndorfian" is the only appropriate phrase to use
when describing the rawk machine that is Monster Magnet. Yes, lead
Magneteer Dave Wyndorf is worthy of his own descriptive, his impeccable
songwriting skills truly standing on their own crater-pecked asteroid in
the music-biz cosmos. So it goes with Monolithic Baby!, which marks a
couple of superficial transitions for Monster Magnet -- off a major and
back to an indie; new rhythm section (Jim Baglino on bass and Bob
Pantella on drums) -- but still upholds Wyndorf's highly entertaining
mass of contradictions and vices. Simultaneously whip-smart and
cementhead-stupid, smirking and sincere, he can challenge your intellect
with an inspired arrangement or pseudo-political left-field lyric, then
bash you over the head with a fat, greasy guitar riff; such is his
genius. While Wyndorf's earlier endeavors were psychedelic dope dreams,
he would eventually kick the hard stuff for a new addictive: sex. So
it's no surprise that Monolithic Baby! kicks off with four smarmy-charm,
crotch-thrusting musical metaphors for the horizontal mambo in "Slut
Machine," "Supercruel," "Unbroken (Hotel Baby)," and especially "On the
Verge," which counteracts a nudge-nudge-wink-wink doomsayer lyric ("Take
me Jesus, take me Allah, rape me in my room/Torch our days in paranoia
while we gorge ourselves on gloom") with a propulsive arrangement that
explodes with climactic fury. The air-guitar heaven continues with
"Radiation Day," which could have been cribbed from Black Sabbath's
Master of Reality, and "Monolithic," which is constructed on an
appropriately ugly, clubfooted fuzz-bass riff. His worship of all things
Detroit continues with "The Right Stuff," a Hawkwind cover performed as
a nod to the MC5 boasting a scruffy, two-chord pre-punk riff, and
"There's No Way Out" offers a Bob Seger-like, dusty '70s AM radio strum
and chorus. But fans of Monster Magnet's space rock origins will revel
in Monolithic Baby!'s pièce de résistance, "Ultimate Everything," seven
and a half minutes of psychedelic wastoid thunder: its stomping,
rhythmic trudge sounds flogged by cloven-hoofed beasts while Wyndorf
wails, "Lookin' up at the big sky, what do I see, a thousand years of
bullsh*t comin' down on me!" and guitar solos flame out amidst a
swirling whirlpool of acid-trip reality-escape. In other words, Wyndorf
shows no signs of slowing down as he pilots Monster Magnet across the
cosmos and straight into Satan's lap, the whole time binging on pills
and pussy and paranoia. Monolithic? No argument there, Wyndorf following
up his titular boasts with yet another collection of undeniably
Wyndorfian tunes. [The U.S. version of Monolithic Baby! featured two
bonus tracks: "King of Mars 2004," a re-recording of a track from 1995's
Dopes to Infinity, and a cover of the Velvet Underground's "Venus in
Furs." A limited-edition version came packaged with a bonus DVD boasting
two promo videos and live and interview footage.]
tags: monster magnet, monolithic baby, 2004, flac,
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