Around the turn of the millennium -- just after the release of
Blur's moody sixth album,
13 --
Damon Albarn began to quietly back away from the very concept of fronting a rock band, turning his attention to a series of collaborative projects that soon overshadowed his main gig. First there was the electro-bubblegum group
Gorillaz, which afforded
Albarn the opportunity to masquerade behind a cartoon, a move that allowed him to let his music speak louder than his fame, a method that he found irresistible as he began to do several projects similar to this, including a voyage to Africa documented on
Mali Music, along with other less-publicized forays into soundtracks. In this context, the post-
Graham Coxon Blur album
Think Tank seemed less like a band effort than another conceptual project directed by
Albarn instead of the work of a band, which is what all these new-millennium projects were at their core, including
the Good, the Bad & the Queen, a quartet comprised of himself,
Clash bassist
Paul Simonon,
Verve guitarist
Simon Tong, and
Tony Allen,
Fela Kuti's drummer, who was name-checked in
Blur's "Music Is My Radar," and whose eponymous 2007 album is produced by
Danger Mouse, who previously collaborated with
Albarn on
Gorillaz's second album, 2005's
Demon Days.
A flurry of pre-release activity compared
The Good, the Bad & the Queen to
Blur's 1994 masterpiece
Parklife, as it represents a conscious return to
Albarn writing songs specifically about London at a particular point in time. Thematically accurate though this may be, it is also misleading, suggesting that
Albarn is also returning to the bright, colorful, clever guitar pop that made his reputation -- something akin to
Coxon's reclamation of that sound on his excellent recent solo albums, Happiness in Magazines and
Love Travels at Illegal Speeds. That couldn't be farther from the truth, as
The Good, the Bad & the Queen is deliberately drained of color and mired in moodiness. If
Parklife exuberantly captured the giddiness of the mid-'90s, as fashions and politics changed, ushering in New Labor, Britpop, and new lad culture,
The Good, the Bad & the Queen captures how all that optimism has calcified into weary cynicism, as the endless opportunities of the '90s have given way to a warring world that seems to lack any center or certainty. So, in that sense, it is a cousin to
Parklife in how it captures a national mood, but in sheer sonic terms, the closet antecedent of
Albarn's is
Demon Days, which traced out an apocalyptic vision despite its insistent pop hooks. Which isn't to say that
The Good, the Bad & the Queen is a
Gorillaz album in disguise, nor should
Simonon's presence suggest that this is the second coming of
London Calling; if anything,
GBQ suggest
the Specials at their most haunted, which is hardly uncharacteristic of
Damon, who has always used "Ghost Town" as a blueprint whenever he's wanted to get spooky.
Despite these echoes of the past -- and there are other echoes, too, arriving in
Simonon's thundering dub bass,
Tong's spectral guitars,
Allen's nimble rhythms, and
Albarn's vaudevillian piano and carnivalesque organ --
The Good, the Bad & the Queen is most certainly its own distinctive thing, the product of five iconoclastic musicians working a theme endlessly, relentlessly, and inventively, producing music that plays more like a movie than an album. Early on, as "History Song" eases into view on a circular acoustic guitar phrase, it establishes an alluring, dank, and artfully dour mood that the band continually expands and explores without ever letting the gloom lift. But for as dark as this is,
GBQ never sounds despairing -- it's wearily resigned, as
Albarn and his bandmates prefer to luxuriously wallow in the murk instead of finding a way out of it. There's a comfort in its melancholy, particularly in how the album glides from one elegantly doleful song to another, but at times the album almost sounds too samey, with no individual song emerging from the whole. Part of the reason for this is
Danger Mouse's production: it's as subtle and clever as ever, but built largely in the post-production -- to the extent that he'll mix out
Allen for large stretches of the album just for the aural effect. He's orchestrated a unified, dramatic album -- it's a tapestry of impeccable, sorrowful, yet sultry soundscapes -- but given the pedigree of this band, it's hard not to wish that the album offered more of the quartet just playing, gussied up with no effect. Nevertheless, as an album
The Good, the Bad & the Queen is singularly effective, bringing the roiling melancholy undercurrent of
Demon Days to the surface and creating a murky, mud-streaked impressionistic rock noir that's sinisterly seductive in its gloom. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine