Walker Kong

Deliver Us From People

(Magic Marker)

US release date: 27 March 2007

UK release date: Available as import

by Dave Heaton

PopMatters Associate Music Editor

The title Deliver Us From People, like most of the album’s lyrics, makes the most sense when you roll with the idea that this band of five Minneapolis rock n’ rollers has been replaced by animals, like the tiger-faced drummer on the cover. Consider the album a cry of help from our animal friends—mostly playful, sometimes philosophical, and occasionally overly strident (lots of talk of “freedom"). On that front it succeeds best when it feels like a dream, a quality accentuated by the dreamier side of their vocal harmonizing, and not hurt by one of the vocalists sounding a lot like ultra-surrealist Robyn Hitchcock. Just as often as surrealists, though, this band of animals resembles a high-powered power-pop group, with Kinks tendencies but also a habit of expressing each thought with a power chord. Picture a bunch of tiger-faced, human-bodied, leather-jacketed stadium-rockers on stage, surrounded by bright lights and fog machines: Cheap Trick reborn as mythological man-beasts, with chips on their shoulders.

— 21 June 2007
Tagged as: walker kong
Related articles
 

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Columns | recent
Blood and Thunder:  Tearing Down the Pillars
Lowbrow Literati:  There Was No Way to Tell This Man Was a Monster
Events | recent | archive
:. Jolie Holland — 23.October.08: Boulder, CO
Books | recent | archive
:. Dusty! Queen of the Postmods by Annie J. Randall
:. The Letters of Allen Ginsberg by Allen Ginsberg
RECENT MUSIC

In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best in new music.