With all the talk of a stylistic shift amongst the club of black rebel motorcyclists, many things remain equable: the hair, the monochrome wardrobe and the peppered references to Jesus (which one always felt could easily be followed by "and the Mary Chain). Still, Robert Turner has reverted to his genuine surname (Levin Been) and the band have lurched towards the blues. But the familiar song structures havent been absented, and instead the gaps, once populated by jags of distortion, have been replaced by well-assimilated choirs, organs and blues harp. And while, intelligently, BRMC include no references to "the Delta or "Poor Willie Brown, Howl does present a difficult case for fan acceptance. The ballads, which once sounded like a less ornate, more excited Spiritualized, now sound like Keane. Yet the rootsy "Shuffle Your Feet and "Aint No Easy Way Out carry a near-authentic barroom lilt and are immitigably catchy. As with most transitional albums, Howl is a curates egg, resting half-way between what it doesnt want to be and what it hopes to achieve.
(RCA)Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
Howl
BY Andrew SteenbergPublished Oct 1, 2005