Comedown Machine by The Strokes.

Sold Date: May 24, 2020
Start Date: March 29, 2020
Final Price: $21.68 (USD)
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Tracks:
Tap Out
All the Time
One Way Trigger
Welcome to Japan
80s Comedown Machine
50/50
Slow Animals
Partners in Crime
Chances
Happy Ending
Call It Fate, Call It Karma

Performer Notes:

Arriving a relatively quick two years after Angles, Comedown Machine reunites the Strokes with producer Gus Oberg, but the results sound a lot less slick and overwrought. Instead, Oberg provides a clean, intimate sound that feels like a natural progression for the band, with a mix of chugging guitars and synths that feels more organic and less like blatant '80s worship (and also bears a striking similarity to Julian Casablancas' solo album Phrazes for the Young). Likewise, most of Angles' uneven but entertaining tangents are smoothed away, making it one of the Strokes' more consistent albums in some time. True to its name, however, Comedown Machine is also some of the band's most subdued music: there are fewer uptempo songs than might be expected, and even when their amps are cranked, the Strokes aren't exactly carefree. "All the Time"'s refrain of "You're livin' too fast" is a far cry from "Room on Fire"'s "Please don't slow me down if I'm going too fast," and on the album's most quintessential rocker, "50/50," Casablancas snarls "Don't judge me" over artfully mussed guitars in a way that feels more defensive than defiant. For most of Comedown Machine, the band uses some of its prettiest melodies -- and some impressive falsetto vocals -- to craft a vulnerable, quietly confrontational mood on songs like "Tap Out" and "Slow Animals," which has an almost soulful roundness to its melody as Casablancas wonders, "Is it gone?" They venture deeper into this softer territory on the album's title track, which rivals First Impressions of Earth's "Ask Me Anything" in its dreamy introspection, and on "Chances," which boasts soft-focus keyboards that flirt with chillwave. At times, the band's precise playing and Oberg's pristine production border on airless and only emphasize the fact that the Strokes left the reckless charm of Is This It behind years ago. However, their flair for hooks and melodies is as strong as ever, particularly on "Partners in Crime," "Welcome to Japan," and "One Way Trigger," which sets pre-life crisis laments to a perky keyboard riff reminiscent of a-ha's "Take on Me." The Strokes' most mature music yet, Comedown Machine is a solidly enjoyable album, even if it lacks some of the band's previous spark. ~ Heather Phares

Professional Reviews: Rolling Stone (p.68) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "COMEDOWN MACHINE is basically a solo trip for singer Julian Casablancas, showing yet again how much he respects Eighties New Wave."

CMJ - "[I]t's easily the band's best effort in over a decade, a seamless set of strong rock songs that strikes a compromise between the straightforward rock of old and the newer pop flourishes."

Billboard (p.41) - "[I]t's clear COMEDOWN MACHINE captures a band back on its way up."

Mojo (Publisher) (p.94) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[It] feels like a band consciously deciding to explore their surroundings....[T]he out-of-body meander of the '80s 'Comedown Machine' and the purgatorial lo-fi cabaret of 'Call It Fate, Call It Karma' suggest an intriguing reincarnation."

Paste (magazine) - "'Tap Out' harnesses a hugely funky new-wave groove, building tension through the interplay of Nikolai Fraiture's bass and the twin electric guitars of Albert Hammond Jr. and Nick Valensi."

Format: Vinyl (1 Disc)

Country: USA

Release Date: 26 March, 2013

Label: RCA