(Ninja Tune)With now departed frontman Isaac Wood its playful driving force, the
London band’s inspired second album is best heard in a single sitting
Things rarely associated with fun: 1) free jazz, 2) math rock, 3) Black Country, New Road. On the London band’s second album there is less of the “fire in a pet shop” jazz than on their 2021 debut For the First Time, but there are still whiplash changes of time signature and songs that take forever to get going. Thankfully,
music isn’t just about fun: it can be about creating remarkable soundworlds of baroque pop fantasias, and this band are outstanding at those.
Like Arcade
fire, BC,NR’s playfulness and humour is unfairly overlooked, smothered by an intensity that seems utterly inimical to fun. Maybe it’s not quite TV Burp, but Isaac Wood’s voice, heavy like a father’s frown, solemnly obsessing over Billie Eilish, Concorde and “the clamp”, is a hoot. Shame that he unexpectedly left the band last week, as he’s often the best thing about it.