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March 26th, 2000

BLACK BOX RECORDER - “Weekend”

BLACK BOX RECORDER - “Weekend” (Free with Uncut, March 2000)
1998’s “Child Psychology” was an indie gimmick-hit, due to a sharp chorus and Sarah Nixey’s deadly pristine vocals (Hannibal Lecter as Roedean head girl). It was slick, glib stuff, and I didn’t like it much, but “Weekend” is beautiful. Almost nothing’s changed - the music is still minimal clockwork-pop, Nixey’s voice is as cut-glass as before - but Black Box Recorder are cutting deeper nonetheless, and writing superb hooks is only a part of it. Luke Haines’ other band shifted up a gear last year, when he stopped making his anger and frustration the main attraction in his songs and started using it as a malignant background hum: on this evidence, Black Box Recorder are going to make a similar leap with “Weekend”s parent album.

For now, this is the best ‘alternative’ track I’ve heard this year; intelligent, oblique and reserved. The last band to prod mundanity’s surface like this were Frazier Chorus, and Black Box Recorder answer the same question they did - can you turn the absolutely ordinary into extraordinary music? You knew what the answer was, of course, but it’s nice to be reminded like this.

Written by Tom on Sunday, March 26th, 2000 | 332 views |

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