Chapel Club - Palace Album Review

Chapel Club Palace Album

Review of Palace Album by Chapel Club

In my experience there are only two types of music fans; on the one hand, there are a bunch of people who own a copy of - I mean own a copy of as opposed to downloaded their favourite bits - the likes of Raw Power, Is This It, or John Grant's Queen of Denmark. And the other camp think that Interpol sound like Joy Division.

I say this because that second group, just by making the comparison, prove beyond doubt that they've never heard a single word that Ian Curtis' alien baritone ever crooned (Aside of course from those on the ubiquitous and almost ridiculously out of character Love Will Tear Us Apart) and by extension have been suckered by Paul Banks' rather effective PR people, along with a lazy rock hack or two.

Chapel Club are a London five piece who are full of post-punk ennui-lite, as defined by not by the old school philosophical weight of Nietzsche or Freud that weighed down tortured young men of the late seventies, but by modern-day keepers of our conscience like Charlie Brooker, and of a world with major problems like a broken iPhone. Seemingly keen to illustrate his debt to Northern ghosts of the last century, lead singer Lewis Bowman rounds out his fixated roots by making good on some vaguely intriguing Morrissey affectations, whilst his band mates create a sound which would look very much like Interpol>Editors>White Lies were it represented as some kind of family tree thing.

Nothing wrong with that I hear you say, and rather than considering subject matter like the transitory nature of human existence, Palace shows that these apparently winsome boys also care about sins of the flesh, a view illustrated most obviously on early single O Maybe I, as Bowman sings "O maybe I should f** around with someone else's wife" in a profane tribute to his mentor. Elsewhere what's on offer is of a more straightforward derivation, with both Five Trees and Blind harking back to the era when The Back Room seemed like the most important debut album in years.

Up to this point however, Palace is simply delivering yet more pop in middle class doom's clothing and for the previously mentioned guys who think that the most important Hook was the character in a Disney movie, that'll be just fine. The more intuitive will want to take a closer listen to its most involved, but conversely rewarding moments however; The Shore is six minutes of dreamy, fx heavy shoegaze that recalls the likes of early Ride, whilst the not much shorter Fine Light sounds like a weird hybrid of The Drums and Foals at their most somnambulant, until a hugely unexpected but thrilling mid-song tempo change. Either prove that, when stretched and back shifted, this is a sound that could escape the creative event horizon of perpetual Academy headliners. When it comes to clubs in general, I'm with Groucho Marx, but there is just the feeling that Chapel Club may convince me otherwise yet.

Andy Peterson




Site - http://www.myspace.com/chapelclub

More From Contactmusic.com

More From The Web



Write for us

Editors Recommendations

A Seat Beside Leonardo DiCaprio On Space Journey Sells For Millions

A trip to space with Leonardo DiCaprio has been auctioned off for...

A Seat Beside Leonardo DiCaprio On Space Journey Sells For Millions

Abbie Cornish Laughs Off Death Rumours

The Sucker Punch star became a hot topic on social networking websites this week...

Abbie Cornish - Abbie Cornish Laughs Off Death Rumours

Epic Movie Review

The story begins as teen Mary Katherine, better known as MK (voiced by Seyfried), returns home to live...

Epic Movie Review

Will The Real Psy Please Stand Up? Fraud Exposed At Cannes! [Pictures]

It looks like Psy has a mimic, with the South Korean rapper denying his alleged appearance...

Will The Real Psy Please Stand Up? Fraud Exposed At Cannes! [Pictures]

Katy Perry spends $11.2m on two Hollywood homes

The 'California Gurls' hitmaker has treated herself after recently putting hers and ex-husband Russell Brand's...

Katy Perry - Katy Perry spends $11.2m on two Hollywood homes

Without Assange's Blessing, 'WikiLeaks: We Steal Secrets' Rolls Out In Theaters

Acclaimed documentarian Alex Gibney has returned with no-holds-bared look...

Without Assange's Blessing, 'WikiLeaks: We Steal Secrets' Rolls Out In Theaters

The Hangover Part III

For the final instalment of the trilogy, filmmaker Todd Phillips takes a sharp left turn, abandoning the formula...

The Hangover Part III Movie Review

Vampire Weekend's Billboard No.1 Is A Triumph For Independent Music

Indie rockers Vampire Weekend have topped the Billboard 200 chart with their latest record 'Modern Vampires of the City,'...

Vampire Weekend's Billboard No.1 Is A Triumph For Independent Music

Sweet Jesus! Jennifer Aniston Strips Down In 'We're The Millers' [Trailer]

Remember when the trailer for Horrible Bosses rolled out online? Yeah, the internet buckled under the weight...

Sweet Jesus! Jennifer Aniston Strips Down In 'We're The Millers' [Trailer]


More recommendations

Comments

Chapel Club Newsletter

Subscribe to this news alert service to receive news and reviews on Chapel Club

Unsubscribe | Unsubscribe All