Tuesday, February 28, 2023

2023 MUSIC REVIEW: Gorillaz 'CRACKER ISLAND'









GORILLAZ – ‘CRACKER ISLAND’
Release Date: 02/24/23
(PARLOPHONE/WARNER MUSIC)




The British virtual-band who are vets of uniquely blending electro, rock, jazz, hip-hop, & pop music, make their post-Covid return & this 8th album's said to be heavily influenced by coastal Latin America during their latest world tour.  Although a handful of the 1st few guests scream Los Angeles (Thundercat, Stevie Nicks, the Pharcyde, Beck), I really do dig the opening title track’s energy.  Catchy, creative, & thrives on Thundercat's buzzy funk basslines & adlibs, introducing us to the idea of a cult paradise island of refreshing enlightened music but you cannot leave & will die here.  2nd single "New Gold" flexes a catchy hook & Pharcyde's Bootie Brown rhymes well over the funky live drums, bass thumps, glimmery synthesizers & organs.  The stylishly retro "Tarantula" is fun, playful City Pop/J-Pop keys & drums fitting into  any yacht-rock playlist.  From how past collaborators De La Soul flow all over the throwback D.A.ISY-Age, sunny hip-hop thumper "Crocadillaz" it makes me miss the recently-passed Trugoy even more.  The Beck-&-Damon Albarn duet "Possession Island" meshes nice for a we're-all-in-this-together anthem & an epic scope of plucked strings, violins, vibraphone, that psychadelic Mellotron electro-piano, & the horn section at the end.  Checking a box of 1 genre the Gorillaz hasn't messed with yet, Reggaeton star Bad Bunny shows up on the wavy, mid-tempo beachy tones of "Tormenta" affectionately rapping how love is never perfect or easy, which will be a hit.  Similarly, my favorite beat here of rat-squeak effects & snapping snares, is bonus track "Controllah" with Brazilian rapper MC Bin Laden spitting in Portuguese.  Props also to giving their UK-African opening act Adeleye Omotayoa a lead-vocal jam on the smoky neon-lit, chorus-heavy ode to freedom "Silent Running". 

I normally dig Del/the Hieroglyphics crew but "Captain Chicken" kinda wastes an extremely groovy hard beat, just to feel too jokey.  A 2nd try at City Pop-Rock wasn't as effective on the glossy, lower-tempo "Baby Queen", where it's luminous pace & melancholy mood drags quickly.  For songs like the extremely folksy "Skinny Ape", where while Damon's vocals are emotional and I get the lullaby chimes & slow bluegrass guitar, it is a bit basic & sleepy.  Wasn't a fan either of "Oil", being minimalistic 80s indie-pop featuring Fleetwood Mac Stevie Nick's uncharacteristic lonely, robotic vocals. 

Very much a camouflaged loose concept project, yet one where most grooves stand on their own also.  While there's some pacing issues here-n-there, I genuinely liked 9-of-13 songs.  They still pull out some tricks to remain refreshing; and unlike previous Gorillaz albums, it doesn't overly rely on the impressive guest-lists as much.  Just clear, concise, creative, breezy-lofi-electro-pop-rock with feel-good energy and smooth emotional vocal performances.


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