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You Are Free

Cat Power

(Matador)

On past albums, Cat Power’s sole member, Chan Marshall, played the role of

the girl who sits at the back of class and is too timid to raise her hand and

give the answers she obviously knows. She was eccentric, introverted, nervous,

and very nearly brilliant. If her primary flaw was her unwillingness to assert

herself, on her new album, the meaningfully titled You Are Free, she

sells herself as a major singer-songwriter with more facets than shy and skittish.

You Are Free widens and develops Marshall’s sound beyond the stark

intimacy of voice and minimal accompaniment. A slow, sad electric-guitar riff

illuminates the country-bluesy “Good Woman,” while a chorus of background

singers — including Eddie Vedder and two girls named Maggie and Emma, ages

10 and 11 — play male and female devils and angels on Marshall’s shoulders.

Other songs feature odd string arrangements from David Campbell (Beck’s dad)

and violin from the Dirty Three’s Warren Ellis. The result is a piercing, ramshackle

sound that is dynamic enough to volley confidently from the ghostly folk of

“Werewolf” to the crunchy alt-rock of “He War.”

She still communicates painful, scary intimacy better than just about anyone

else (other than, say, Lucinda Williams). On “Werewolf,” the verses

disintegrate into a wordless chorus of soft whoops and ee-ahs that conjure an

otherworldly eeriness, while on “Names,” her voice takes on the scars

of a thousand tragedies as she catches up with her teenage friends who’ve lived

rough, ill-fated lives.

Marshall has developed her songwriting voice; she has also honed her physical

voice considerably. She projects a wide range of emotions through the sheer

raspiness of her vocals and the rhythms of her phrasings. At times, she sounds

like a more nuanced PJ Harvey but without the bull-in-a-china-shop wail that

Polly Jean passes off as feminine sexuality. On “I Don’t Blame You,”

the type of rock-and-roll metasong that would fit perfectly on a Sleater-Kinney

album, she sounds self-assured and confident as she deconstructs her own tortured

stage persona, while on “He War” she sings “I’m not that hot

new chick!” with punk-cool attitude.

In other words, You Are Free may be Marshall’s fourth album, but it’s

her first to approach greatness. It should lift her out of the indie arena she

has been haunting for years and drag her into the national spotlight, a development

that Marshall will probably still view with some reluctance and that everyone

else will applaud. —Stephen Deusner

Grade: A

Lovebox

Groove Armada

(Jive Electro)

When rave came along, it was celebrated because it was the antithesis of classic

rock. Now it is classic rock and often very self-consciously so. See

the last couple of Chemical Brothers albums or Fatboy Slim’s Halfway Between

the Gutter and the Stars. And now add the new Groove Armada to that list.

Londoners Andy Cato and Tom Findlay broke through with 1999’s Vertigo,

in particular when Fatboy Slim’s remix added some badly needed funk to their

single “I See You Baby,” giving the duo a massive club hit. But Vertigo

itself was often watery — sometimes to great effect (“At the River”),

usually not. Something similar applied to 2001’s Goodbye Country, Hello Nightclub.

It’s with Lovebox, though, that Cato and Findlay make their classic-rock

move.

This isn’t to say that the album sounds all that different from their earlier

work. It’s just that these arena-rave tricks (bludgeoning drumbeats, enormous

basslines, a thick overall sonic ambience) have become so expected that it’s

hard to be thrilled by them anymore. Also, for dance artists and listeners,

disco has now become part of the classic-rock canon, so disco drumbeats and

diva wailing signify in much the same way as the guitar solo or the sneering/leering

British male vocalist does. Lovebox has a little of all those elements,

as well as the Jamaican sounds that have long been prevalent in U.K. dance culture.

The way Cato and Findlay deploy them is appealing in a holding-pattern kind

of way: The album is both more self-consciously funky than usual but also looser,

all without feeling very notable in the end. — Michaelangelo Matos

Grade: B

Wonderful Rainbow

Lightning Bolt

(Load Records)

Just when you thought a bass/drums noise duo that play through 3,800 watts

of unmic’d power couldn’t sell 30,000 albums, along come Providence, Rhode Island’s

Lightning Bolt. I know, nobody has really ever pondered that, but Lightning

Bolt have developed into a minor phenomenon. Up until Wonderful Rainbow,

their third full-length, Lightning Bolt albums have been little more than dressing

for the live experience. Said experience starts with two guys quietly setting

up gear in a corner of a club (usually opposite the stage), then the second

the opening band concludes their set, Lightning Bolt commence to cleaning the

ears of every patron sporting the berries to stick around.

Brian Chippendale plays like the future of our world depends on how hard he

hits the kit, and Brian Gibson looks like he’d rather be making lunch as he

picks his instrument (which is strung with three bass strings and a banjo string),

but what comes out of the latter’s 10-foot stack will have you second-guessing

any preconceived idea of “intensity.” Sonic Youth were wowed enough

to invite Lightning Bolt to play a handful of high-profile gigs and tried to

coerce the duo into playing last. Seems the experienced veterans had

some trepidation about following the live act of the new millennium — a live

act that has rounded up quite a drove of believers, as is evident by album sales

previously unheard-of within the realm of discordant noise so far removed from

pop or rock standards.

So what do you get out of the new record? You get a conspicuous branching

out from prior albums. Long passages of, dare I say, hypnotic bass noodlings

(don’t get the idea that we’re talking Jaco Pastorius here) provide a pretty

cohesion between the times when the guys lock into their rhythmic romper room.

Too few notes (and even less fidelity) to be prog-rock- or metal-based, the

dominating sound is a more pedestrian, driving take on Japan’s Ruins or early

Boredoms. The sparse vocals are delivered through a talk-show lapel mic fixed

inside the drummer’s ski mask, and they come out through the bass amp, so don’t

expect an intelligible sing-along to the bouncy, nursery-rhyme yelps. For a

convincing visual document, last fall’s VHS/DVD The Power of Salad lovingly

follows Lightning Bolt on a cross-country tour and is available through the

label. Become a believer. — Andrew Earles

Grade: B+