Mew

And The Glass Handed Kites | Sony
By SHARON STEEL  |  September 26, 2006
3.0 3.0 Stars
Now that Montreal has been drained of exportable Canadian bands, Scandinavia is being tapped for fresh discoveries. And Mew are the unclassifiable Danish quartet at the top of the list. This release is a prog-rock tour-de-force crafted as one long song. Transitional time signature changes and careful overlapping passages give it the air of a symphonic arrangement. “The Zookeeper’s Boy” morphs from brutal, fleshy bass thumping into a twinkling falsetto chant; “Fox Club” is an all-too-brief 65-second placeholder, and “Special,” like the gorgeous Scandinavian blonde who dyes her hair black to stand out in a crowd, has definite single potential — or maybe it’s just a four-plus-minute hook. Mew aren’t quite a goth Dream Theater, but neither is their fourth album simply another dull Loveless homage: Kites’ ugly-beautiful harmonies are hypnotic and attention-getting in the same way that a painted opera star lights up a stark stage. The difference is that Mew can unfold the drama without the make-up, or in their case the weird animation that typifies their live gigs. Kites is fussy with its own too-pretty trimmings, but peel back the masquerade and it’s still got fantastic bone structure.
Related: Three for all, Ctrl+Alt+Dstry, Ogre Ferreus, More more >
  Topics: CD Reviews , Dream Theater, MEW
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY SHARON STEEL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   YO, JONNY! THE LOVE SONG OF JONNY VALENTINE  |  February 05, 2013
    Sometime after becoming a YouTube megastar and crashing into the cult of personality that has metastasized in contemporary society, Teddy Wayne's 11-year-old bubblegum idol Jonny Valentine is hanging out in his dressing room getting a blow job from a girl who doesn't even like his music.
  •   LENA DUNHAM AND HBO GET IT RIGHT  |  April 13, 2012
    When a new television show chronicling the lives of young women arrives, it tends to come packaged with the promise that it will expertly define them, both as a generation and a gender.
  •   EUGENIDES'S UPDATED AUSTEN  |  October 12, 2011
    For his long-awaited third novel, Jeffrey Eugenides goes back to look at love in the '80s — and apparently decides that it's a lot like love in the early 19th century.
  •   REVIEW: RINGER  |  September 08, 2011
    Sixty seconds into the CW's new psychological thriller Ringer, star Sarah Michelle Gellar is seen running from a masked attacker in the darkness.
  •   LOVE'S LEXICOGRAPHER  |  February 10, 2011
    As the editorial director at Scholastic, David Levithan is surrounded by emotional stories about adolescents. Being overexposed to such hyperbolic feelings about feelings could easily turn a writer off pursuing such ventures himself — despite the secrets he may have picked up along the way.  

 See all articles by: SHARON STEEL