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The Mars Volta: The Bedlam In Goliath

It's a well-established fact that bands put out
albums far less frequently than they used to. (The Beatles, for instance, made
more than a dozen in seven years.) And yet The Mars Volta doesn't get much
attention for having released one album per year, like clockwork, since its
2003 debut De-Loused In The Comatorium. Granted, prolificacy
is one of the least attention-grabbing things about The Mars Volta. Singer
Cedric Bixler-Zavala and guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez have used the platform
they built as leaders of post-hardcore legend At The Drive-In as a launching
pad; they've since gone intergalactic with a sleek, questing form of prog.

The problem with The Bedlam In Goliath, the band's fourth
full-length, isn't that it shares prog's overproduction or pretense. Rather,
it's a bit undercooked. The band's frenzied rate of output seems to have
trampled any inner editor, and the result is a splat of concepts and virtuosity
that never coheres. The disc's opener, "Aberinkula," is a billion toy laser
guns going off at once, while the ballad "Tourniquet Man" degenerates from
stiff to silly as Bixler-Zavala piles on the Mickey Mouse effects and tries to
wade through remedial free-jazz. Rodriguez-Lopez isn't off the hook: In "Ilyena,"
he's responsible for perhaps the unfunkiest funk ever made, and his solos
throughout Bedlam buzz
and nag without eloquence or equilibrium. Now might be a good time for The Mars
Volta to step back, take some time off, and actually think their mighty ideas
through before chucking them all against the wall at once.

 
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