| Two
and a half years after the Arcade Fire burst onto the
scene at CMJ, frontman Win Butler is still scared
shitless. "I don't wanna work in a building downtown." "I
don't wanna hear the noises on TV." "I don't know why but
I know I can't stay." This is one paranoid sonofabitch
(those are all lines from different songs, by the way). "I
don't wanna see it at my windowsill," he coos painfully on
"Windowsill," referring to just about anything
negative—wars, terror, MTV, debt, the Man, etc. It's a
mad, mad, mad, mad world indeed.
But then, that's nothing
new for these Canucks. Funeral's 2004 breakout was
forged in the fires of loss, and the result was the
loudest, most brazen wake ever made for $10,000. Neon
Bible is similarly burdened, only this time there's
far less hope. "There's not much chance for survival/If
the neon bible is right," goes the title track. "There's a
fear I keep so deep/Knew its name before I could speak,"
goes "Keep the Car Running." Only humongous centerpiece
"Intervention"—propelled by the humongous organ the band
unearthed in the church it moved into to record the
album—offers the sense of unwavering confidence that "Wake
Up" did.
And that's OK. Neon
Bible isn't nearly as grandiose, as naive as its
predecessor. The band's still outfitting their ramshackle
sound with hurdy gurdies, accordions, horns, strings, and
that humongous organ, but the songs here are generally
more subdued, more nuanced. Unfortunately, there's also
more lyrical cow patties like "MTV, what have you done to
me/Save my soul, set me free." Dude, you've been living in
a church in the middle of nowhere. Kurt Loder is not
giving you the heebie-jeebies. So there are growing pains
here, there's doubt and sadness and confusion. And there's
fear.
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