Audioslave - Out of Exile
Every once in a while a band comes along
that really changes the way you perceive
music, for me one of these bands was Rage
Against the Machine. I'll be the first
to admit that I, like most angsty teenagers
was lured into Rage's music by their anti-authoritarian
songs, and honestly dude, they said "fuck"
a whole lot. Not only did the vulgar language
lure me in but instead of writing about
girls and cars, they took the time to
write music about something that actually
mattered, politics. Gimmick or not, the
music was compelling. Soon after I first
heard Bulls on Parade on the radio I started
to really question why I was listening
to a lot of the other music that interested
me at the time. Slowly I began to drift
away from happy songs about love and sunshine,
and turned to songs that really had a
purpose. That being said, I was very excited
when I first heard that one of my favorite
bands of all time was going to reform,
and motherfucking Chris Cornell is going
to be their singer. It was like some sort
of early-90s rock wet dream. Soundgarden
and Rage against the Machine coming together
to form a band that would revolutionize
rock! Or so they all said.
Fast forward to today; Audioslave has
released Out of Exile the follow-up to
their self-titled debut released in 2002.
Rock doesn't seem to have been revolutionized;
in fact it seems almost exactly the same.
Just as with their self-titled released,
the band has crammed in as many publicity
stunts as possible, playing on the streets
of LA; resulting in a riot, and an even
larger stunt in Cuba in front of 50,000
fans at Havana's Anti-Imperialist plaza.
Brilliant marketing, but does their album
measure up to the amount of hype the band
has surrounding them at all times? After
all they are a supergroup consisting of
2 of the most successful rock bands in
history. The answer to this is an unenthusiastic
'No."
Out of Exile opens in stereotypical Tom
Morello fashion with a gimmicky guitar
line dropping in to a tired riff; strikingly
similar to Cochise. While the album isn't
really terribly offensive, it just lacks
the presence and power of any of the Soundgarden
or Rage against the Machine releases,
chalk it up to nostalgia or whatever you
want, but this album simply does not deliver
the caliber of music that we all know
these musicians are capable of creating.
Every song is written using the same pop-rock
formula and Morello's gimmicky solos simply
do not work in conjunction with Chris
Cornell's dark vocals.
The album moves through a dozen songs
that all follow the same basic formula;
the album does 'rock' at a few occasions,
but the tone and attitude just seems to
have been completely lost. It seems like
the band is just going through the motions
and then moving on. A few of the songs
have a very strong Soundgarden feel to
them, while others seem to be some sort
of Led Zeppelin effects laden tribute,
the album's seventh track The Worm especially.
The bands first release consisted mainly
of Rage against the Machine leftovers,
but the few songs where the band actually
let themselves go, namely The Last Remaining
Light and Shadow on the Sun, were extravagant
and exciting. I got this album hoping
that this type of writing would dominate
the album; sadly this is just simply not
the case. The only track that I can recommend
to anyone is the title track, and the
only reason I recommend it is because
it is written like a self-titled Rage
against the Machine era nostalgia track.
I guess that's basically what the band
has decided to sink to, a tribute to what
they used to be.
Sadly this album will probably soar up
the rock charts and make the band millions
of dollars, in some ways you have to respect
the band for being able to make money
by re-writing the same songs they have
been writing since 1991, but it'd be nice
to see some sort of growth. Turning to
pop-rock; U2 style, may be growth, but
the majority of the bands core fans will
think it's moving in the wrong direction.
Overall: 3.9
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chris Elkjar is the founder of 'trust.me'
an online music magazine. He spends all
of his spare time immersed in music, be
it writing reviews, interviews with leading
bands or writing his own music.
For more of his writing, check out Trust-Me.ca
- Music for robots