Album review: Red Hot Chili Peppersâ âIâm With Youâ
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The yin and the yang of music and lyrics in rock is a complicated swirl, one within which the Red Hot Chili Peppers have struggled to find balance throughout their career. On the bandâs 10th studio album, and first with new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, longtime band mates Anthony Kiedis, Flea and Chad Smith create an album thatâs way stronger musically than it is lyrically.
But thatâs nothing new. Over the years theyâve ridden through the Hollywood Hills on saber-tooth horses, conversed with dolphins and witnessed first-born unicorns. This time Kiedis proposes to a lover like this: âBe my wife/ I think youâre right/ we should mate.â Not the most romantic guy, is he?
The band has always made up for verbal shortcomings by going non sequitur and crazy, both lyrically and musically. Thereâs no arguing with Flea, nor the rhythm section, nor the bandâs tastes in guitarists.
âIâm With You,â though, is a mishmash, lacks a center, and way too often feels duct-taped together from various points in the bandâs career. (Though âMonarch of Rosesâ may be their first disco song.) Nestled within the hour-long, 14-song album is an EPâs worth of Peppers awesomeness, including âBrendanâs Death Song,â one of the best of the bandâs career, and âThe Adventures of Rain Dance Maggie,â which features a cowbell and a crazy midtrack breakdown.
The rest of it, though, is stuff that will probably sound just fine beneath NFL highlight reels but fails to gel when the volume is up and California 2011 beckons. RELATED:
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-- Randall Roberts
Red Hot Chili Peppers
âIâm With Youâ
(Warner Bros)
One and a half stars (Out of four)