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At
the Drive-In
Relationship of Command
label: emd / virgin
released: 09.12.00
our score: 4.0 out of 5.0
buy
it: here
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Coming
to a Theatre Near You
by:
matt
halverson
"Have
you ever tasted skin?/sink your, sink your teeth in it,"
sings - check that, screams - Cedric Bixler of At the Drive-In
on "Arcarsenel." Take lyrics like those any way you
want to, but when they follow the churning, disorienting tribal-drums
of the song's intro, they're enough to make you think you might
just be dealing with a band of cannibals. Cautiously advance a
little further into Relationship of Command, their third
album and Grand Royal debut, and you'll find the messages only
become more absurd and harmlessly cathartic rants. ATDI shouldn't
be taken any more seriously than they take themselves.
At first listen,
it's hard not to compare the El Paso punk quintet to rap/metal
pioneers Rage Against the Machine. Bixler sounds disturbingly
similar to now-defunct RATM's front man Zach de la Rocha, and
guitarist Omar Rodriquez shows a flair for technically complex
effects akin to those of Tom Morello. But that's where the comparisons
end. Where RATM was a distinctly political band that used its
music to rally neo-revolutionaries, ATDI is more comfortable using
its music to drop-kick listeners in the chest. A locomotive of
adrenaline-charged punk, Command is the coming-out party
for a band that has toiled in small-club obscurity for nearly
six years.
But to classify
ATDI as strictly a punk band would be a little naive. They'll
assault you with Rodriquez's speed metal guitar and Tony Haijar's
oh my god he's torturing those fucking drums beats, but they're
a truly evolved form of punk - they use a keyboard for Christ's
sake. Songs like "Pattern Against User" and "Mannequin
Republic" are face-forward shit-kickers, but they're tempered
by the trance-like quality of "Enfilade." With spacey
guitars and Bixler's electronically filtered vocals, it hints
at a punk evolution. "Rolodex Propaganda" even dabbles
in Radiohead's OK Computer
sci-fi exploration.
When he softens
his tone, Bixler exhibits a surprisingly melodic, breathy vocal
range that belies the anger with which he usually screams. As
the napalm-guitar carpet bombing subsides from time to time, he'll
even lower his voice to a whisper. Without the onslaught of driving
stomp to drowned him out, it's possible to make out what he's
saying from time to time - but that doesn't mean it makes sense. "Skin
graft machinery/sputnik sickles found in the seats"? "Bullet
ridden with vermin/be it the peasant stark frenzy"? When
you figure it out, drop
me a line.
Stream-of-consciousness
lyrics aside, ATDI is a refreshingly new step in the progression
(and to a certain extent, the rebirth) of punk. Though far from
politically charged, the fist-pumping anthems on ATDI's Relationship
of Command are a call to arms of sorts. At the very least,
they'll make you want to throw a trash can through the nearest
store front - or maybe just dream of doing it.

If you
liked Relationship of Command...
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Tracklist:
1.
Arcarsenal
2. Pattern Against User
3. One Armed Scissor
4. Sleepwalk Capsules
5. Invalid Litter Dept.
6. Mannequin Republic
7. Enfilade
8. Rolodex Propaganda
9. Quarantined
10. Cosmonaut
11. Non-Zero Possibility
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