Quantcast
Music
cover art

Art Brut

Art Brut Vs. Satan

(Downtown; US: 21 Apr 2009; UK: 20 Apr 2009)

Art Brut Vs. Satan could have just as easily been called Bang Bang Rock and Roll III. The band is still just as capable of hanging with the punks as they are with the indie kids, Eddie Argos is still barking drunken blog posts instead of singing them, and all songs—excepting seven-minute closer “Mysterious Bruises”—still come in nice, manageable blocks of verse-chorus. With most bands who fall into diminishing returns like these, this is the point where we begin to grow weary, cut our losses, keep the excellent debut in our collections, and go look for someone else to worship. This won’t happen with Art Brut, though, because even though any of their songs could migrate from one of their three LPs to another without any of us being the wiser, this band is still damn near impossible to dislike.


The fact that Art Brut refuse to develop or mature in any obvious way between recording sessions is sort of the whole point. As far as indie music goes these days, this band proves with Art Brut Vs. Satan that they’re still one of the most punk bands that we’ve got going for us. Not necessarily in sound—though cuts like opener “Alcoholics Unanimous” have more than a bit of the propulsive energy that defined the first rebellion—but in ethos. Punk rallied against the increasing pretensions of ‘70s rock; Art Brut rally against the rampant preciousness and self-seriousness of modern indie. This band never seems to think the sounds that they’re making with their instruments are of Profound Importance—Argos is more interested in complaining about hangovers than attempting “poetry”, and despite having the word in their name, this band has no interest in making art with a capital A. There’s no posturing here: they’re making genuine, simple rock music, they’re “just talking to the kids”, and man is that refreshing.


Just because Art Brut don’t attempt a dramatic stylistic shift with this one, that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ve has been doing nothing but getting hammered between recording sessions. While the band’s earliest work did little more than create a simple (though brutally effective) punk pulpit from which Argos could shout his riotous anecdotes, with Art Brut Vs. Satan the rest of the band is, more than ever, their own entity. On the surface these songs seem to draw from the same songwriting vocabulary as those on It’s a Bit Complicated, but listen a little closer and you’ll notice the wandering bassline of “DC Comics and Chocolate Milkshake” and the complex guitar progressions of “Am I Normal?”. Little flourishes like these aren’t going to jump out and slap you in the face—especially when put to the service of an aesthetic that asks to be enjoyed rather than examined—but they’re there, and they’re interesting evidence of maturation in a band whose chief interest often seems to be not maturing.


But, naturally, Argos is the one who you’re going to be paying the most attention to, because it’s basically impossible to not pay attention to him. He’s the rare drunk guy at the bar who actually is as charming and interesting as he thinks himself after eight or so beers, and he manages to make what would typically be the subject of vapid Twitter updates—hangovers, songs that get stuck in your head, excitement over discovering an amazing band that you somehow didn’t know existed (in this case, it’s the Replacements)—sound instantly relatable, engaging, and often hilarious. He can’t sing (it’s not irony) and he rarely even tries, but that hardly matters because, again, that’s the whole point here.


That point is that Art Brut aren’t much more talented than any random group of kids who got bored one afternoon, decided to start jamming in the basement, and formed a band. The crucial difference between Art Brut and everyone else, though, is that they’re fully aware of this, and they thrive on it. Sure, their music won’t change the world, and neither will anyone else’s—but at least Art Brut have the guts to drop all pretense and just focus on showing us a damn good time.

Rating:

Media
Related Articles
7 Dec 2009
Most shows at Bowery aren’t intimate, but Art Brut performed as though we were all at a party, and they were the ones drunk enough to stand on the kitchen table and start expounding.
3 Apr 2009
Holden Caulfield -- with his sexual insecurities and confused immaturity -- provides the raw meat that Art Brut’s Eddie Argos cooks with.
By PopMatters Staff
23 Jan 2008
PopMatters' annual tradition of offering up its Slipped Discs picks continues with the biggest installment to date. These are the albums our writers just loved, but missed our enormous top 60 albums list late last year.
20 Jun 2007
Talk-singer Eddie Argos and his art-pop indie rock quartet bring on the fun once again for their sophomore album.
Comments
Add a comment
Please enter your name and a valid email address. Your email address will not be displayed. It is required only to prevent comment spam.
Name:
E-mail:
Location:
URL:
Remember my personal information
Notify me of follow-up comments?
Now on PopMatters
Marginal Utility: RSS feed blues
RSS feed blues (Marginal Utility) [Fri, 1:42 pm]
Cowabunga, M@#!@&F*&%^$! (Mixed Media) [Fri, 11:45 am]
Fran Healy Streams New Song (Mixed Media) [Fri, 10:30 am]
'Crazy for You': Best Coast's Peculiar Charm (Sound Affects) [Fri, 10:00 am]
The Prez Does 'The View' (Mixed Media) [Fri, 9:30 am]
A Dinner Game for Idiots, Schmucks, and Hollywood Remakes (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 9:00 am]
'Dinner for Schmucks': Mice and Men (Reviews) [Fri, 8:00 am]
Growing Up Twisted (Reviews) [Fri, 6:20 am]
Jamaica Are 'Short & Entertaining' (Mixed Media) [Fri, 6:08 am]
  1. By Volume 8, That Big Ol' 'Family Guy" Has Grown Pretty Lazy (Reviews)
  2. 'Batwoman: Elegy' Is a Comic Masterpiece About an Openly Gay Superhero (Reviews)
  3. Wipeout: The Game (Reviews)
  4. 'Limbo': A Little Physics Platformer in the Gothic Tradition (Reviews)
  5. Growing Up Twisted (Reviews)
  6. Losing My Religion: Revealing the Hollow Reality of Lo-Fi (Sound Affects)
  7. This Just In: The Hooters’ “And We Danced” May Be the Worst Video of All Time (Sound Affects)
  8. "Being Human"... Even When the Monsters Win (Features)
  9. Jonny Lang: Live at the Ryman (Reviews)
  10. Robert Randolph and the Family Band: We Walk This Road (Reviews)
  11. Pull Up the Sound: The Story Behind M.I.A.'s Innovative Producer (Features)
  12. Cowabunga, M@#!@&F*&%^$! (Mixed Media)
  13. Knowing Nolan... Again (Short Ends and Leader)
  14. Liz Phair: Funstyle (Reviews)
  15. A Good A.I. Trick (Moving Pixels)
  16. God of War... The Indie Film (Mixed Media)
  17. The World According to Country Radio: It's Pretty Basic, Baby (Columns)
  18. Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, and the Narratives of American Popular Song (Features)
  19. Korn: Korn III: Remember Who You Are (Reviews)
  20. Morality in Mystery Dungeon: 'Shiren the Wanderer' (Columns)
  21. The Facts of Life in 'Inception', 'Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind', and 'The Matrix' (Short Ends and Leader)
  22. Best Coast: Crazy for You (Reviews)
  23. Double-Edged Sword: Making Mistakes in 'Diablo II' (Moving Pixels)
  24. Memes and Marketing (Marginal Utility)
  25. Sun Kil Moon: Admiral Fell Promises (Reviews)
  26. Natalie Merchant: 13 July 2010 - New York (Notes from the Road)
  27. PopMatters 20 Questions: Gene Weingarten (Features)
  28. The Books: The Way Out (Reviews)
  29. PopMatters Picks: The Best of TV on DVD (Special Sections)
  30. Bell Biv DeVoe - Salt-N-Pepa: 25 June 2010 - Chicago (Notes from the Road)
  1. Losing My Religion: Revealing the Hollow Reality of Lo-Fi (Sound Affects)
  2. What Would Happen If You Threw a Revolution and Everyone Showed Up? You'd Have a Cognitive Surplus (Reviews)
  3. The New Breed: Sasha Grey, aTelecine and the New Morality (Features)
  4. '8: The Mormon Proposition': While Nobody’s Watching (Reviews)
  5. R.E.M.: Fables of the Reconstruction (Deluxe Edition) (Reviews)
  6. Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, and the Narratives of American Popular Song (Features)
  7. Sarah Palin's Creative Vocabulization (Columns)
  8. Surreptitious Selling Out (Marginal Utility)
  9. Big Boi: Sir Lucious Leftfoot: The Son of Dusty Chico (Reviews)
  10. Liz Phair: Funstyle (Reviews)
  11. We Built Our Own World: Hans Zimmer and the Music of 'Inception' (Features)
  12. All The Things They Do!: A Superstar Interview with Adam Schlesinger & Mike Viola (Features)
  13. Play It Again, Please: Grappling with Repeated Album Listens in the iPod Age (Sound Affects)
  14. This Just In: The Hooters’ “And We Danced” May Be the Worst Video of All Time (Sound Affects)
  15. Sequels We Were Unfairly Denied (Columns)
  16. Tommy Keene: Tommy Keene You Hear Me, A Retrospective, 1983-2009 (Reviews)
  17. Will there be an 'Inception' backlash before the movie even opens? (PopWire)
  18. Anaïs Mitchell: Hadestown (Reviews)
  19. Ed Kowalczyk: Alive (Reviews)
  20. Is Speed Running Artistic? (Moving Pixels)
  21. Transparent Difficulty in 'Order of Ecclesia' (Moving Pixels)
  22. Miley Cyrus: Can't Be Tamed (Reviews)
  23. How Does One Beat the Heat? Try Descending Into Icy Madness (Columns)
  24. Temporal Warp and Your Brain: Side Effects of Classics Hits Radio (Columns)
  25. Birth of a Nation (Cesarean Delivery) (Columns)
Music Archive
PM Picks
Announcements


© 1999-2010 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks
of PopMatters Media, Inc. and PopMatters Magazine.

PopMatters is wholly independently owned and operated.