It has been two full years since the dissolution of Mclusky left many missing the warm feeling generated by their sharp tongues and bass fuzz, and some feared the formidable Andy Falkous may never return. Indeed, his former partner in crime Jon Chapple had time to form a new band, put out numerous releases and then put the band on hiatus and emigrate before most people knew Future of the Left even existed.
But where Shooting At Unarmed Men often missed the target, despite showing glimpses of excellence, Future of the Left’s debut single doesn’t falter at any point. More Mclusky than Jarcrew - of which bassist Kelson was formerly a member - the arrangements are minimal throughout: often just drums, distorted bass, simple lead guitar and Falco’s familiar vocals. Lead track ‘Fingers Become Thumbs’ is fuzzy and up-tempo, with simple lead guitar and a sing-along, almost jolly chorus.
It’s not the strongest track here though, as AA-side ‘The Lord Hates A Coward’ arrives like Jack Nicholson’s axe through a bathroom door and blows its predecessor away with a call of “violence solved everything”. It’s menacing, dark and angry but crucially controlled, with a partly-screamed chorus and the challenge of a fight to the death. You know when you walk into a room after two people have been arguing and, even though they’re sat in perfect silence, the air is heavy with tension? That’s what this is, in audio form.
And then, after the quirky but still incredibly loud bread-based b-side ‘The Fibre Provider’, it’s all over: two years of silence overpowered by eight minutes of excellence. The duration isn’t important though, because if this is a glimpse of what is to come – oh god, please let this be a glimpse of things to come – Future of the Left are about to show us all how the true winner isn’t always the first to pass the post. Sometimes it’s the one with patience. And maybe a fucking big axe.
Oh yes!!!
This stuff is mint!!
After
that cruel 'Rice is Nice' teaser this morning, now some full-on Mclusky related juice.
I must admit that i'm slightly dissapointed with this single. Still welcome the 9 rating purely through association though.
Great review though and i'm off to give this numerous more listens before hopefully withdrawing my reservations.
i think
it's superb.
though
that cover art is cartoonily ugly..
Ace.
They are properly ace.
when i first heard "lord hates a coward" live
i nearly came in my pants
picking up exactly where the best bits of "the difference between..." left of, and adding in a whole heap of excellent vocal delivery and scathing shellac-isms...
Good point about...
...patience too, Shooting At Unarmed Men = Euros Childs; Future Of The Left = Richard James. Athanku.
Kelson...
As the article rightly said, Kelson is formerly a member of Jarcrew. But the article forgot to mention that when kelson was in Jarcrew he was the best frontman we've seen this decade. And Jarcrew are THE single biggest band 'that got away' this decade.
The boy's got talent and it's wasted behind a bass. Unleash the Kelson, realise his potential!
Darth Pompey
See y'all at the gig tonight.