Classic Rock

Palaye Royale

The Bastards

- Essi Berelian

Sin City-based art-rockers reinvent themselves and shoot for the stars.

If there’s one thing Palaye Royale brothers Remington Leith, Emerson Barrett and Sebastian Danzig do not lack, it’s artistic vision and balls, with third album The Bastards intended to be an extravagan­tly adventurou­s step up and beyond previous releases Boom Boom Rooms (Side A) and (Side B), a spectacula­r evolution designed to take them to The Next Level.

The two Boom Boom Rooms were an enjoyable amalgam of My Chemical Romance modernity and a vintage Faces and Stones vibe, delivered by three youngsters who looked like they’d been at the Black Crowes’ dressing-up box. They also sound positively restrained when compared with The Bastards, which creaks beneath the huge weight of expectatio­n and its own loud and lavish, hard-edged pop production values; subtle it is not.

Unsurprisi­ngly, it’s also an album that wears its issues and bleeding heart on its fashionabl­y frayed sleeve, and just a glance down the playlist speaks volumes: Masochist, Anxiety, Lonely, Nervous Breakdown, Nightmares (Coming Down) and Massacre, The New American Dream. This album is way heavier than their earlier material, sonically and also lyrically; we have mental health problems, drugs (prescripti­on and otherwise), guns, death and destructio­n – all that good stuff, revved up to critical mass and primed to explode like a multi-megaton firework display of misery over the Las Vegas strip.

Just to add an unexpected twist, The Bastards also ties into an arty mythos the band have been developing for several years, although it’s not essential to understand­ing the songs, of which the top track has to be the Marilyn Manson-esque Massacre, The New American Dream, an impassione­d protest song about spiralling gun violence in the US, on which the band sound almost like disciples of the God of Fuck. Elsewhere, Nightmares (Coming Down) appears to have War Pigs spliced into its DNA, while there’s some Stonesy swagger in Nervous Breakdown – although Remington sounds like he’s well past his nineteenth. Thankfully, Stay, Fucking With My Head and Hang Onto Yourself dial back the almost overwhelmi­ng sonic clutter a touch, although for the most part there’s no vocal, riff or drum beat on this album that isn’t radically retooled in some way.

Ambitiousl­y over-reaching from start to finish, The Bastards is the sound of a band relentless­ly pushing themselves creatively to broaden their artistic identity. With a step change this bold at this point in their career, who knows where Palaye Royale will head next. ■■■■■■■■■■

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom