After an era of silent hedonism and Levi's, grown men in
shorts, we have sluggishly entered a new age. Or is
it an old age repackaged before our eyes? Has Walt Disney
come back to life? Gary Numan and Blade Runner were
once versions of the robotic future. Now they are nostalgic
and tacit views of what our present age would be like,
as they once imagine. But now Numan would like to be
Nine Inch Nails and Blade Runner is just a cool looking
movie. Then here comes Soviet into the mix. I am not
sure where they are from or who they are. I can look
at the cover of their CD and I think of Kraftwerk videos.
Maybe it's just a ski lift in Switzerland. I hear the
synthesizers and remember that new romantics were all
about surface and the death of Eros. Will we ever inhabit
the man/machine?
Soviet has been described as "Dressed in red shirts
with white ties and matching belts, they resembled a
mixture of Flock Of Seagulls and the Thompson Twins.
With only a mixer and two keyboards, they entertained
a growing crowd with 40 minutes of beautiful, catchy
electronic tunes." Sounds more like Kraftwerk or
OMD. Why they have British accents is beyond me. Whereas
similar bands like Adult. And Ladytron seem to spend
a lot of time on crafting beats, Soviet sound like they
use a little Casio with only the most rudimentary beats.
What today's bands now forget that most bands of the
early 1980s had excellent live drummers. And even once
futurists like Steve Strange who has starred in the
"Ashes to Ashes" video, now lives with his
mom and collects welfare.
It seems as if Soviet have been received well as a live band.
But hearing someone else's opinion about whether a band
can deliver on-stage is much like hearing that Jennifer
Lopez is good in bed. The songs have pop quality, but
the almost melancholy voice recalls the unemotional
world of Alphaville. "Commute", "Marbleyezed",
and "Lonely Days" are the best songs here
which deal with empty spaces, cold love, and alienation.
This is a palette which David Bowie and John Foxx have
explored almost 25 years ago. I guess reading J. G.
Ballard was as popular then as it is now? I guess all
music is there to be discovered in the virgin woods.
One shouldn't have to be bogged down by history or who
did what? I want to be a machine, damnit!
"We Are Eyes, We Are Builders" is eventually an
important record. Soviet is a leading contender for
one of the year's best new synth-pop bands. They show
great promise and could be as interesting on record
as Adult. And Ladytron. They are already allegedly a
good live act. They have our attention. What they need
are stronger beats and tunes with a better sense of
purpose. They could deliver the future if they tried.
Soviet has our attention. The style gurus may move on
to the next thing. Nirvana is dying to make a comeback.
Alexander Laurence
Back
to Band List