QRO Magazine
2012 Festival Guide
2012 U.K. Festival Guide
Indie on Late Night
Upcoming Releases
NYC Concert Preview Guide
QRO Magazine on Twitter
Idlewild
Make Another World
 After motoring uphill on an increasingly steeper slope of fame, expectation, and contractual obligation, Scotland's Idlewild have finally ridden over the crest, thrown it in neutral, and can just coast now.  While their 2005 release, Warnings/Promises, wasn't as appreciated as their previous efforts, it was a climax of all sorts that afforded the band an opportunity to check themselves.   Their Parlophone contract was up, so they could release their work on their own terms.  The result is Make Another World, an album that is the same vehicle that goes as fast as it ever did, but coasts on momentum of the drive that got them there.

This time around, there was a conscious attempt to rely on old methods to assemble the album.  Appropriately, the band went into the studio with producer Dave Eringa, who was an essential force behind 100 Broken Windows and The Remote Part.  In doing so, they've recreated a nearly authentic mix of the fresh, speedy punk-pop and philosophic poignancy that made those albums so dynamic.  But, perhaps in growing older and reshuffling priorities, they lost their grip on the captivating hooks that pulled them up the mountain.  There's a mature, cathartic tone to Make Another World - as if the band is happy just to be able to play the music again as it comes to them - without all of the external motivation weighing them down. 

On Make Another World, Idlewild utilize the wide variety of parts that built their success.  "If It Takes You Home" has the familiar thrash of the early days but ties down the wilder side of they would've done in the past.  But there's the pop quality of the discopunk "No Emotion" that endeared them to casual fans and the quick, grinding rock of "Everything (As It Moves)" that won the obsessive ones.   "Once In Your Life", by far the most down-tempo track on the album is still strong, with a rippling guitar solo and eloquent refrain.  The basic elements of Idlewild's middle-career ascension to semi-stardom are available, but are just not as proactive as they used to be.   

While it's an improvement of Warnings/Promises and a welcome refresher on the band's biggest strengths, Make Another World isn't quite as robust as some of the previous works.  It's good to see the band recharge themselves and step into a new phase assertively - that they can create a solid album within their new freedom - something that isn't as easy as it sounds.  


Latest Album Reviews

Ane Brun
It All Starts With One
Ane Brun : It All Starts With One
Norwegian singer-songwriter Ane Brun has delivered a strong and consistent fourth solo record.
Violens
True
Violens : True
In the overflowing Brooklyn music scene, there's a rough divide between the harder-rocking garage acts and the airier, prettier ones.
Elvis Costello
The Return of The Spectacular Spinning Songbook
Elvis Costello : The Return of The Spectacular Spinning Songbook
Elvis Costello & The Impostors' 'Spectacular Spinning Songbook' returns.

Latest Concert Reviews

Alcoholic Faith Mission : Live
Alcoholic Faith Mission : LiveFueled with Voodoo Doughnuts, Alcoholic Faith Mission delivered to a rockin' crowd in Portland.
I Break Horses
I Break Horses : LiveThose lucky enough to enter the House of Blues Boston took a spacey journey that felt like one long dream starting with opening act I Break Horses.
The Cribs : Live in the U.K.
The Cribs : LiveThe student-filled O2 Academy in Manchester started heaving forward the instant the visual art showed "The Cribs" on the backdrop.