Source:University
Wire, October 2, 1007
BY: Ethan Wills
If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then Portishead
should be sporting Sting-sized egos by now. In the three years
since
the release of their debut, Dummy, Geoff Barrow and Beth Gibbons'
combination of downtempo beats and melancholic vocals
has been the most co-opted formula since Kurt Cobain taught
everyone to whisper their verses and scream their choruses.
Following this string of pale imitators (Morcheeba, Moloko, Lamb,
and-the Bush of trip-hop-Sneaker Pimps) Portishead finds
the Bristol, England duo returning triumphant and miserable.
If, as someone said, Dummy was music for a dinner party, then
Portishead is music for your Last Meal. On tracks like
"Elysium," Geoff Barrow's eerie synth lines and spare
beats evoke the same menace as Wu-Tang producer RZA's foreboding
soundscapes. From the horror movie sound effects that introduce
"Humming" to the funereal organs and cackling vocals of
"Seven Months," Portishead is creepier than a trip to
the SAE laundry room.
Apparently, nobody still loves Beth Gibbons and she's not afraid
to tell us about it. Her voice is so often distorted on this
album
that on the rare occasion that it is allowed to stand alone, its
haunting beauty is all the more affecting. This shines through on
"Undenied" where Gibbons allows herself to sound as
vulnerable as a certain yodelling Alaskan (this is the type of
sad love
song Jewel would write if she hadn't been home-schooled).
Portishead may not sound as revolutionary as Dummy, but
Portishead have certainly earned the right to spend their second
album perfecting a sound so many others try to imitate.
Portishead should prove to be the benchmark of a genre the band
practically invented-it doesn't tamper with the winning formula,
but proves Barrow and Gibbons the masters of it.