Surely taking their moniker from the Talking Heads late 80s hit, San Franciscos Wildildlifes debut full-length Six demands attention from noise/experimental fans. After a lengthy intro, Matthew J. Rogers guitar in "Things Will Grow resembles the most "out there tones that Stephen Brodsky could ever coax from Cave In proper, while "Tungsten Steel-Epilogue flirts with pop structures played in a Harvey Milk-like power-violence cacophony. "Whooping Church sounds like a Mandible Chatter-esque collage punctured throughout by sonic worms. The 18-minute "Magic Jordan takes its cues from the Doors "The End, Pink Floyds "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun and David Crosbys "Cowboy Movie, crescendoing in massive, crashing movements and plentiful bell trees. The bass buoyant "Feed could be from an anti-King Crimson in a parallel universe, while the final two tracks, "Kross and "Nervous Buzzing, are exclusively inspired by the Melvins. Toeing the line between cunning and codswallop, Wildildlifes music is best illustrated by the mosaic skull on their album cover: spooky, crazily colourful and inviting inquiries.
(Crucial Blast)Wildildlife
Six
BY Chris AyersPublished Jan 21, 2008