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Gorillaz demon days album cover info
Gorillaz demon days album cover info








gorillaz demon days album cover info

Gorillaz’s video escapades offer diversion and cover - and emotional deniability - from troubled thoughts like those, but Mr. Albarn mourns “the memory of my fall from grace in your eyes,” and vows, “I’m not gonna cry.” He’s even more bereft and apologetic, though cushioned by synthesizers and backing vocals, in “Fire Flies,” a not-quite-waltz (there’s an extra beat) that has him wondering, “Am I losing you?” Over a steadfast, trudging beat in “Kansas,” Mr. Albarn’s voice in “Idaho,” where he seeks the repose of natural beauty but finds “Out there in the wilderness, another bullet hole.”īut on “The Now Now,” distance doesn’t let him escape his regrets. Plush, majestic major chords waft around Mr. The titles include not only “Hollywood” but also “Kansas” and “Idaho,” while the credits note that the tracks were demoed in hotels in those places. There’s autobiography, or at least a travel diary, in the songs. Albarn observes, “I filled the canyons with my ego/Look, there’s a billboard on the moon.” And in “Souk Eye,” a plush Latin-electro ballad, he’s in Los Angeles again, pledging “stone love” to someone before noting, “I got to run soon.” In “Magic City,” a shimmering processional, Mr. Hewlett set its video on a Los Angeles beach. “Calling the world from isolation,” he sings in the album’s opening song, the ironically upbeat “Humility,” which is laced with breezy George Benson guitar fills Mr. He might well be a pop star on and off the road more than one song places him among the luxuries and seductive unreality of Los Angeles. Albarn is a man on his own, lonely and in motion. But “The Now Now” has more private concerns. Previous Gorillaz albums, like “Demon Days” and “Plastic Beach,” have contemplated recent or impending societal and environmental catastrophes. “Tranz” has a tapping, blipping, squared-off kraut-rock pulse and countermelodies “Lake Zurich” recalls the stuttering synthesizers of “The Message” by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. Albarn’s voice with subliminally nostalgic synthesizers: puffy, rounded, unaggressive tones that provide a cozy backdrop for Mr. His main collaborator here is the producer James Ford, from Simian Mobile Disco, and together they surround Mr. Albarn stays decisively in the foreground. (Current Gorillaz lore has Murdoc imprisoned after being framed for drug smuggling his replacement, to trivia lovers’ delight, is Ace from the Powerpuff Girls’s band).īut there are fewer guests than usual on “The Now Now” for this album, Mr. Hewlett’s imaginary, multiethnic and conveniently ageless band: the brain-damaged English singer and keyboardist (and Albarn surrogate) 2-D, the towering African-American drummer Russel Hobbs, the young female Japanese guitarist Noodle and the roughneck English bassist Murdoc Niccals. Albarn a flexibility that has turned out to be quite shrewd. Not far underneath it are the deep misgivings that Gorillaz has never exactly hidden. Its first two albums sold in the millions worldwide, carried by singles like the 2005 track “Feel Good Inc.” Although there have generally been long gaps between Gorillaz studio albums, its sixth one, “The Now Now,” appears just over a year after “Humanz.” The surface of the new songs is glossy and tuneful, with bubbling synthesizers and knowingly retro echoes of the 1970s and ’80s. Albarn’s diverse projects - including the Britpop band Blur that made him a star in the 1990s, collaborations with African musicians, and full-scale European and Chinese-influenced operas - Gorillaz became the blockbuster. And it’s the melancholy that lingers.Īmong all of Mr. Hewlett’s antic, allusion-laced animations. Albarn’s music has been a counterpoint to the rest of Gorillaz’s presence: melancholy and introverted alongside Mr. Albarn’s songs have been deeper and more durable. Hewlett’s online visual chronicles have been inventive and fun, but Mr. I confess: I’ve never been able to sustain deep interest in the elaborate fictional universe of Gorillaz, the virtual, cartoon-character band conceived in 1998 by the English songwriter Damon Albarn and the comics artist Jamie Hewlett.










Gorillaz demon days album cover info