IT’S GOOD TO HEAR AN
ELEGANT ROAR
By Nina Bhadreshwar
REVIEW OF DEBUT ALBUM OF TWISTED WHEEL:
The arrival of the three piece ‘Twisted Wheel’ is rather like
the arrival of a strange machine; you are not quite sure how it works, but it
works well. There’s a bit of fear too – what will happen when they let
go, when the throttle is flat to the floor, the chains are off?
It’s not that rock ‘n’ roll has got saggy exactly but maybe it’s a bit
tired. Maybe it’s forgotten where it came from, who it’s for, what it’s
for. Well, let Twisted Wheel reintroduce you to the fundamentals in their
pitiless, full-on songs.
A real song is one that makes you smell, feel the
place it was born. It’s simultaneously as familiar and remote as your
first crush and this album is packed with them.
‘Lucy The Castle’ is a
remorseless stramarsh.
Lead singer Johnny Brown spits out a furore of
lyrics like a baby Weller but with the intonation of an older, earthed-in
Mancunian Daltry. It uses the rhythms of the Ramones’ lesser-known tunes
and seventies’ punk to form a gem of an adoration anthem.
It’s admittedly
the one which rips up the floor at an early stage in their live sets.
But it’s
just a precursor for the already legendary ‘She’s A Weapon’. The song hurtles
through a gamut of intense minor chords before ripping itself to rags in a
mod-meets-rock bridge.
It’s the beautiful bare bones of these songs which
makes them unusual.
While others aim for vacillation and vagueness for
mystery, it’s the sharp shadows and echoes of Twisted Wheel’s crystal clear
sounds and the graceful brutal architecture of these tunes which haunt and
intimidate. There’s a stark symmetry in each. ‘We were talking in the
garden, we were talking in the sea, we were talking in the city…I just have one
thing to say: What’s your name?...It was dark now it is light’(‘What’s Your
name?)
Stripped down to the bare knuckles of tightly coiled emotion, they
are concentrated capsules of an intense vigour of thought and feeling few young
bands can articulate.
Brown’s lyrics are sharp, witty and complex – all the
more astonishing confined into such instinctive nuggets. ‘We Are Us’ is a
journey through any post-industrial wasteland, the roar of defiance echoing
over the rift between the new mod/punk and the clumsy sleepy rock which tried
to fill in the gaps of Oasis.
Austere and lean production is what such
rare songs deserve.
The sardonic snarl of ‘Oh what have you done, you
dirty rock ‘n’ roller?’ over taut mauling riffs is more infectious than a
relentless ‘Rock’n’Roll Radio’ (‘Oh what have you done?) and ‘You Stole The
Sun’ is a hilarious, ridiculous rant of a metaphor which hurls itself headlong
on its pitiless percussion and thumping guitars.
It makes perfect sense –
at least for anyone from the UK and melanin-challenged.
But it is ‘Strife’ and
‘Bouncing Bomb’ which hint at the latent power of Brown as an iconic poet in
the ilk of Lennon (before the overt politics). There is the wit, the ache and
the tormented tenderness which never permits itself indulgence, held so rigidly
by each melody.
The range of the songs is remarkable but it’s their clean
structure and haunting lyrics which really mark them out.
Don’t underestimate
their understated simplicity:
Twisted Wheel have to be so tight as there’s so
much wrapped up in there. Rock ‘n’roll exists for such dense genius.
TWISTED
WHEEL album now available on Columbia/Sony BMG Records
Album also contains
several amazing videos of live performances by the band taken at Manchester's
Ritz.....
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