"His most natural and cohesive sound to date, embracing the best of his past and present."
Johnny Marr has proven himself time and time again.
Whether it's through the legacy of The Smiths, his collaborative work with Electronic, The The, Modest Mouse and countless other projects, a fascinating autobiography or just his commitment to always moving forward. He's now three albums deep into his solo career and Call The Comet finds him settling into his most natural and cohesive sound to date, embracing the best of his past and present.
The least satisfactory moments on his previous two albums came when he used strident sloganeering and a lack of texture in the music. Call The Comet corrects that wonderfully with trademark lush and chiming guitars that resonate across synths, strings and heavily rhythmic landscapes. Hi Hello may be the closest he's veered towards that iconic sound of The Smiths, the ghosts of some of their most famous songs such as There Is A Light That Never Goes Out drifting through Marr's minor chords. It's the finest solo song he's released. That band isn't the only reference point from that era, with opener Rise recalling Disintegration-era The Cure and The Tracers hinting at a Sisters Of Mercy influence just below its surface. Marr has talked about the album having a loose theme of Earth welcoming a different intelligence from the cosmos to save us from our own plight and, though there's plenty of turmoil and wringing of hands over world issues, there is ultimately a sense of optimism that humanity can still rise above the discord and conflict and find its way.
Marr's strong points remain: his guitar playing and compositional abilities; the way his playing can paint in colours and create moods from simple patterns of notes or layered, dense arrangements. Bug takes in a certain kind of funk as filtered through the baggy Manchester scene while Actor Attractor channels both Suicide and early New Order. Though the highlights are many, some judicious pruning of its weaker moments would have made for a stronger album. Marr may have influenced generations of musicians, but on Call The Comet he's paying homage to those contemporaries that have shaped his musical life.
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