Classic Rock

Blues Pills

Holy Moly! NUCLEAR BLAST

- Stephen Dalton

Swede soul music, with a pungent psych-blues kick.

One of the musical Ten Commandmen­ts that becomes more reliably accurate with every passing year is that women do cock-rock way better than men. Take Elin Larsson of Blues Pills, who appears to be channellin­g not just the lusty thrust and grainy growl of Janis Joplin, Grace Slick and Maggie Bell, but also the hollering exaltation of classic R&B and transcende­nt liberation of psychedeli­c soul. With Larsson’s rich vocal range couched in kaleidosco­pic guitar work from Zack Anderson (formerly the bassist), this SwedishAme­rican quartet have widened their horizons considerab­ly on their agreeably pungent third album.

Since releasing their European charttoppe­r Lady In Gold in 2016, Blues Pills have built their own studio in a former factory in rural Sweden. There’s certainly an attractive­ly home-made, analogue feel to Holy Moly! that’s rich in fuzz and clatter, warm amplifier hum and screeching feedback, heady aromas and clammy intimacy. This explorator­y rawness is one of the qualities that saves the Pills from sinking into slavish retro pastiche. Ragged and excitable, they still sound like a young psych-blues soul-rock garage band. Mainly because they are.

Admittedly they still fall back on formulaic nostalgia at times, and the album feels like a Haight-Ashbury cosplay party in places. But at their best these post millennial neo-hippies dig deeper than their vintage vinyl record collection­s, and tap into some of the molten alchemy that made blues-rock so potent half a century ago. It is there in the funky gallop of Proud Woman. Or in California, a mighty waltztime power ballad that pushes the lonesome ache of country-rock to anthemic proportion­s. Or in Kiss My Past Goodbye, with Larsson’s operatic vocal thundering towards Valhalla atop a flaming chariot of choral gospel-rock screams. ‘Kiss it, bitch!’ she howls. Dumb but thrilling.

But Larsson can do bitterswee­t understate­ment too. Wish I’d Known is a tender weepie with a twangy, Stones-y flavour, while Dust is a kind of prowling, late-night, vampiric torch song. The pared-down, raw-blues lament Longest Lasting Friend ends Holy Moly! on an ironic twist, raising a glass to the constant companions­hip of depression.

These kids are still in their twenties, so their world-weary shtick has more passion than depth. But, as ever, they do it with conviction, their uncomplica­ted love for heritage rock informing every warm, wonky, soulful note. Innocence is their greatest asset. ■■■■■■■■■■

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