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  • SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 23 2007 6:52 PM

She Wants Revenge Is Now Better Than Interpol



Who the hell saw that coming?

Here’s a quick history of Interpol:

Early years: frontman Paul Banks is born in England; he soon moves to America and spends some time in Spain; he ends up at NYU where he is a double major in English and Moles; guitarist Daniel Kessler is also born in England and soon moves to America; at an early age, he evinces talent for what will eventually become passions: music and looking at the floor; bassist Carlos D, nee Carlos Dengler, is born in New Jersey; early passion for fascistic fashions evinced when he dresses up as Idi Amin for Halloween (and President’s Day and Thanksgiving); drummer and eldest member Sam Fogarino is born in Philadelphia; during the Depression, he is unable to secure employment and enrolls in the Army where he eventually attains the rank of Captain; during World War II he storms Normandy and saves Western civilization.

2002: After several years of rehearsing and gigging, band lands on seminal record label Matador and releases their debut album, Turn on the Bright Lights. Pitchfork rates the album a 9.5. Upon realizing this score is .4 points higher than the Strokes debut, TigerBeat4Ever smashes head through computer monitor.

2004: Band’s follow-up, Antics, released. Pitchfork awards album an 8.5, or 2.83 points per good song. Upon realizing score is .5 points higher than the one awarded to Strokes sophomore album, Room on Fire, TigerBeat4Ever smashes head into the nice new LCD monitor he bought to replace the first one.

2007: Band’s third album, Our Love to Admire, released. Five minutes after placing album in CD player, TigerBeat4Ever removes it and stares quizzically at the shiny side, wondering if he purchased a defective copy. Surely it’s impossible that the band who wrote “Evil” wrote this, right? Upon realization that album was awarded a higher score than Strokes third album, First Impressions of Earth, TigerBeat4Ever slams head into the soft net he installed to prevent future monitor mishaps.

Let me make this clear: I like Interpol. It took me a while, but after having heard the six good songs on Turn on the Bright Lights repeatedly, I got over my aversion to the abrasiveness of “SHE CAN READ SHE CAN READ” and learned to love Paul’s voice and the band’s over-arching gloominess. It’s just that Interpol’s songwriting ability seems to be like that of Eminem’s and Robert Smith’s, i.e. directly proportional to the misery of their waking lives. If Eminem had never gone ten times platinum, we’d still be listening to entertaining songs about poverty and murdering gay people rather than songs about the hassles of fame and nauseating positivity like “Lose Yourself.” Interpol get worse with popularity. We could probably get a get another great album out of them if we could just find some way to make them all broke. (My solution: double the price of dry cleaning and Valtrex.) The good songs on Interpol’s follow-up are amazing; it’s just that there are only three of them. Interpol ain’t the Blood Brothers: it’s not like they have shrieking and explosions to keep you from getting bored during longueurs. Their slow songs induce narcolepsyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy whoops, I just feel asleep with my head on the keyboard - I’m listening to Interpol as I write this. Maybe I should put a net there, too.

Interpol’s new album does not contain a single great song. I struggled with writing that sentence. Not out of any great love for the band, but because I’m writing this using Microsoft Word 2007 on Vista and it keeps crashing every fifteen secon

Hello? Sorry, crashed. There are a few songs I like – “All Fired Up” is pretty good. But that have-to-got-to-NEED-to hear it feeling that I get out of bed for in the morning is missing, and this is a band that’s capable of generating it. (Semi-side note in reference to track 8, “Rest My Chemistry”: quit nicking the “Where is My Mind” riff; you’re just going to remind me how the Strokes stole it to much better effect and I’m going to get whiplash or break a lamp.)

Remember when She Wants Revenge first came along and everyone stopped accusing Interpol of being Joy Division copycats (which they never were) and started accusing She Wants Revenge of being an Interpol cover act (which they most certainly were)? She Wants Revenge’s appropriation of Interpol’s sound was so complete as to be legally actionable. Even though I loved their breakthrough, “Tear You Apart,” as well as every subsequent track played on radio, I never listened to the album at length or took them seriously as an act.

That’s over now. Their new single, “Written in Blood,” is a minor classic; on par with if not better than “Tear You Apart.” It contains what no song on the new Interpol album does: a knock-out hook. (A “hook” is the memorable, catchy part of the song. Some of you knew that, but a lot of you like Radiohead, so I thought I’d quickly explain.) Also in stark contrast to Interpol, the lyrics are not nonsense. (Seriously, “we spies, we slow hands” sounds like Ebonics.) I want to talk about how great the cowbell in the chorus is, but you all know why I can’t. Add to this their second single, “True Romance,” and they’re 2 and 0. It actually forced me to go back and listen to their debut from start to finish, which is more than half good.

I’m not crazy. I’m not saying that She Wants Revenge is a better band overall, or that the quality, complexity, and originality of their best songs exceed the best by Interpol. I’m just saying, with absolute certainty, that their forthcoming album will have a minimum of two great songs and that Interpol’s current album contains zero. They’re a better band right now, and it’s a turn of events that no one would have predicted a year ago.


 

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Comments
zombiejunk

zombiejunk

Australia
June 2007

SEP 23, 2007 09:34 PM



Interpol's new album does not contain a single great song.



That's some severe bullshit right there.

girl_afraid

girl_afraid

Milwaukee, WI
November 2004

SEP 23, 2007 09:35 PM

_Myth_ said:

girl_afraid said:
joy division still beats both of them.



(and interpol will always be better than she wants revenge.)



+100



this is why we're friends. smile

Psmith

Psmith

Fountain Valley, CA
OLD SKOOL

SEP 23, 2007 09:37 PM

This sounds like the sort of thing I might have listened to on a college radio show called "closed caskets for the living impaired" sometime in 1997, a mediocre band that wants to sound like Joy Division but winds up being a limp lifeless monotone Sisters Of Mercy tribute act. There were no hooks in that song. Not even a stump. That song was not remotely interesting until the girls started making out and the guitarist attempted a gothic surf rock sound and even that was probably a failed attempt to sound like 45 grave or something lamer.

This song is no different from the hundreds of other failed attempts to sound like Joy Division. A boring monotone monobeat song that represents represents superficial reading of Joy Division. They reproduced the grey cold landscape conjured up by Joy Division's music but failed to notice the anguished life beneath. Perhaps this pathetic band was influenced more by a Joy Division video than the music. Is this band from LA? It sounds like it. You can't make that sort of music in a place that doesn't have any brick buildings.

sonic_tooth

sonic_tooth

Kansas City, MO
April 2007

SEP 23, 2007 09:37 PM

I think I'll always like Interpol better than SWR--mostly because of the monotone singing that everyone mentioned. It's just not nice to listen to for terribly long. Now I'm obsessed with 'True Romance'. That song is sex. But I can't see myself buying a SWR album. Interpol on the other hand...I like them enough that I can handle said lack of catchy hooks.

(Radiohead fan.)

Also, I doubt anyone's trying to argue that Interpol or SWR, etc even come close to Joy Division. They don't. They won't. Joy Division were fucking awesome. I kind of wish we could just leave Joy Division out of this discussion, actually.

sonic_tooth

sonic_tooth

Kansas City, MO
April 2007

SEP 23, 2007 09:39 PM

the_colours said:
I think I'll always like Interpol better than SWR--mostly because of the monotone singing that everyone mentioned. It's just not nice to listen to for terribly long. Now I'm obsessed with 'True Romance'. That song is sex. But I can't see myself buying a SWR album. Interpol on the other hand...I like them enough that I can handle said lack of catchy hooks.

(Radiohead fan.)



Also, I don't think anyone's arguing any of these bands come close to Joy Division. They don't. They won't. In fact, I wish we could just leave Joy Division out of this.

nothingtonothing

nothingtonothing

San Lorenzo, CA
December 2005

SEP 23, 2007 09:56 PM

handsome_rob

handsome_rob

Burlington, IA
May 2004

SEP 23, 2007 10:09 PM

i can honestly say that, while i know who interpol is, i have never listened to any bands named in the article. and i bet i'm not missing much at this point.

maybe it's because i'm a cynic who either judges bands by their fans or judges people by the bands they like (and sometimes a combination), but it seems like the "indie" bands everyone's into aren't so "indie" (i mean, if everybody was into them, they'd technically be mainstream, right? *cough*nirvana*cough*) but i still like 'em obscure as hell.

maybe it's because i go for the underdog a lot (especially when the underdog is far superior to the main contender(s)). so i guess, much like my support for mike gravel in '08, i'm throwing fin fang foom out there, because they're too busy being fucking rad to gaze at their shoes or follow the trends to see how thick their black-frame glasses are and still be acceptably "hip."

gunsarelove

gunsarelove

San Francisco, CA
March 2006

SEP 23, 2007 10:12 PM

Another fucking article written by this 17 year old goth girl. Indubitably, up all night on cheap speed, scanning the thesaurus, outlining where to put the ironic banter. [inserts mean emoticon]

90% of the Indie rock/college of today is deeply obsessed
with years 1977 to give or take 1982 so give JD and Factory
records the proverbial brake

mali

mali

San Jose, CA
December 2003

SEP 23, 2007 10:17 PM


Remember when She Wants Revenge first came along and everyone stopped accusing Interpol of being Joy Division copycats (which they never were) and started accusing She Wants Revenge of being an Interpol cover act (which they most certainly were)? She Wants Revenge's appropriation of Interpol's sound was so complete as to be legally actionable.



Being old, and not familiar with Interpol at the time I found SWR, perhaps that disqualifies my comment. However, i LOVE SWR because they encompass all that was dark and edgy about the music that was the 80s for me. I heard that they were accused of being like Interpol, so I thought perhaps I would listen to Interpol and like them.. yah not so much. They don't have that oomph. SWR is like Arcadia, Charlie Sexton, Jesus and Mary Chain all rolled into one and they make me happy. Interpol is "eh".

*shrug Just sayin'

PS I hate Joy Division

sonic_tooth

sonic_tooth

Kansas City, MO
April 2007

SEP 23, 2007 10:17 PM

I could have sworn I hit 'edit', not 'reply'.

FAIL

FreakPirate

FreakPirate

Canada
November 2002

SEP 23, 2007 10:24 PM

You actually give a shit about Pitchfork reviews? There is no hope for you.

And "Tear You Apart" is fucking miserable. It's one of the most boring songs I've had the misfortune of hearing repeatedly in the last while.

Lockeblade

Lockeblade

Australia
May 2007

SEP 23, 2007 10:35 PM

I thought I was getting a history lesson on the origins of the Interpol organisation... I was amazed to read that it was founded by musicians... then I spotted that I was in music news surreal

Synthiviper

Synthiviper

Chicago, IL
June 2004

SEP 23, 2007 10:38 PM

I couldn't agree more. I was so disappointed by the new Interpol album, and the new She Wants Revenge stuff is so great. Breaks my heart. wink

jnthn

jnthn

New York, NY
October 2002

SEP 23, 2007 11:23 PM

mali said:

Remember when She Wants Revenge first came along and everyone stopped accusing Interpol of being Joy Division copycats (which they never were) and started accusing She Wants Revenge of being an Interpol cover act (which they most certainly were)? She Wants Revenge's appropriation of Interpol's sound was so complete as to be legally actionable.



Being old, and not familiar with Interpol at the time I found SWR, perhaps that disqualifies my comment. However, i LOVE SWR because they encompass all that was dark and edgy about the music that was the 80s for me. I heard that they were accused of being like Interpol, so I thought perhaps I would listen to Interpol and like them.. yah not so much. They don't have that oomph. SWR is like Arcadia, Charlie Sexton, Jesus and Mary Chain all rolled into one and they make me happy. Interpol is "eh".

*shrug Just sayin'

PS I hate Joy Division



I would've let you off at "SWR.. makes me happy. Interpol is 'eh'."

Yet you name check Arcadia, J and MC, and (uggh) Charlie Sexton, which means you're old enough to have actually had to go to the mall and phyisically seek out some "odd" music. So how in the world, in the age of having every kind of awesome music handed to you in your bed land on SWR being the 21st century equivalent of the afore-mentioned 3 "new wave bands" when there's at least something better made by some 16 year old on their laptop on myspace music or something that you could have easily gotten off to.

Please don't take this personally, I'm just using your post as a jump-off to how insidious this whole review+comments is.

Really, there is like 30 years of WAY BETTER to enjoy on youtube and everything else on this interweb. Give it a shot.

Start with Wire or Gang of Four or, jesus, Human League at their worst.

Ophelie

Ophelie

SUICIDEGIRL

France

SEP 23, 2007 11:50 PM

They've always been better.
No I'm joking, I don't see how you can compare them but good article still.
Anyway last Interpol has some great songs (Non I in 3some is awesome, The einrich maneuver...) and I still have this dream that Paul calls me on my mobile phone and I faint.
What a voice, SWR don't have this even if they listened a lot to Joy Division which is a very good thing.

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