CD 11 tracks, 45:00
General Rock
Garbage - Bleed Like Me
Interscope (2005)
Dans la collection
#248
01  Bad Boyfriend 03:46
02  Run Baby Run 03:58
03  Right Between The Eyes 03:56
04  Why Do You Love Me 03:54
05  Bleed Like Me 04:01
06  Metal Heart 03:59
07  Sex Is Not The Enemy 03:06
08  It's All Over But The Crying 04:39
09  Boys Wanna Fight 04:16
10  Why Don't You Come Over 03:25
11  Happy Home 06:00
Crédits
Parolier Garbage
Détails personnels
Date d'achat 07.05.2005
Liens Amazon Germany
Détails
Numéro Cat. 50467-7681-2
Emballage Jewel Case
Qualité Enreg. DDD
Audio Stereo
Notes
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine As polished and professional as it was, Garbage's third album Beautiful Garbage killed whatever momentum the quartet had as the LP commercially crashed and burned not long after its fall 2001 release. Subsequently, the band faded out of view, taking a long hiatus before regrouping in 2004 to record their fourth album, Bleed Like Me, which was finally released in the spring of 2005. Although it was released halfway through the first decade of the 21st century, it belongs to the midpoint of the last decade of the 20th century, sounding like a virtual Cliff Notes of the sounds, themes and styles of the post-grunge '90s. As they beefed up the guitars, the band has toned down some of the electronica underpinnings that have been present since their debut - they've not been excised, merely subdued, so this is still recognizably the work of a group that called their second album Version 2.0 with their tongue firmly planted in cheek. But Garbage don't just hark back to their earlier work on Bleed Like Me, they conjure all kinds of ghosts from the '90s, building "Sex Is Not the Enemy" on a Kim Deal bass line while pasting together a guitar riff straight out off of Stone Temple Pilots' Purple and a chorus from Elastica's classic "Stutter" for the album's first single "Why Do You Love Me." Other sounds of the '90s flutter throughout the album - the title track reaches back even further, as its cavalcade of misfits uncannily recalls Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side" in its structure, sentiment and melody - while lead singer/lyricist Shirley Manson trots out a litany of doomed relationships, kinky sex, wallowing despair, teenage cutters and hostile confrontations, all topics that were de rigueur for '90s alt rock. Manson doesn't seem like she's pandering - several songs appear to cut close to the bone, suggesting that she's been through a particularly painful breakup recently - and neither do the band. They're all old pros and they construct their music well, so it's hooky and loudly stylish. Problem is, it's a style that's about ten years out of date. Bleed Like Me doesn't sound like a revival, it feels like it's out of time, as if the band doesn't quite know how to do anything else but sound like it's the heyday of post-grunge alt rock. Since the band's drummer and chief sonic architect Butch Vig helped create that sound with the albums he produced for Nirvana, the Smashing Pumpkins, Sonic Youth and L7, that's not a surprise, nor is it necessarily a disappointment, because the music is not bad. He and his colleagues remain talented, capable professionals, crafting an appealing, tightly constructed album that plays to the group's strengths. It's an enjoyable record, but it's hard to escape the nagging feeling that Garbage has painted itself into a corner: they haven't found a way to expand their sound, to make it richer or mature - they can only deliver more of the same. While they may be able to do this well, it is nevertheless more of the same.