Perhaps deliberately, the blues is just about the only musical style London collective
the King Blues don't tackle on
Under the Fog. Originally released in 2006 on the Household Names indie but reissued by Island Records in early 2008,
Under the Fog is a clattering collision of
Billy Bragg-style folk-punk (many songs are based not on electric guitar, but a forcefully strummed ukulele!), dub reggae,
Joe Strummer's post-
Clash experiments in world music, and whatever else strikes their musical fancy, including the
Beach Boys-meet-
Mighty Diamonds vocal harmonies of the a cappella "If I Had a Coin." A collective of East London squatters with an affinity for band photos with bandanas covering their faces, pirated soundbites from news programs, and artwork that evokes contemporary graffiti artists,
the King Blues are clearly shooting for a
Clash-like mythology of rock group as urban outlaws, and indeed, antiwar reggae-rockers like "Blood on My Hands" are probably a good indication of what
the Clash would sound like if they were a young band in the post-millennial age, or at least they're closer to the mark than
the Libertines ever got. The targets are perhaps a little broad --
the King Blues are hardly the first to notice that
George W. Bush both looks and acts like a "Chimp in a 3 Piece Suit" -- and the agitprop lyrics of songs like "Coming Fi Di Youth" have a certain sense of preaching to the converted, but smart, wry songs like the sardonic scene report "Mr. Music Man" and the impassioned "Getting Out of Here" broaden the themes and emotional impact of the album. Occasionally frustrating but never dull,
Under the Fog is as much a snapshot of its troubling, divisive times as the first
Clash album had been three decades before. ~ Stewart Mason