Review: Nick Cave mellows on new Bad Seeds album

By Christopher Weber
Associated Press

Mexico Nick Cave_Kada
Australian musician and screenwriter Nick Cave poses for a photo during a photo call to promote his new album, 'Push the Sky Away,' in Mexico City, Monday, Feb. 18, 2013. Cave is scheduled to give two concert performances in Mexico City.�(AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

After the furious “Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!” and a pair of swaggering records from primal side project Grinderman, fans of Nick Cave may have expected another slab of guitar distortion and sex and death from the first Bad Seeds album in five years. Instead, “Push the Sky Away” delivers spare strings and electronic loops — and sex and death.

The band’s 15th album in nearly three decades finds Cave introspective again, reminiscent of 1997’s brooding “The Boatman’s Call.” This cohesive collection is built around the six-plus minute “Jubilee Street,” a meditation on pain and obsession featuring a beauty with a little black book, “and my name was written on every page.”

Hannah Montana gets a shout out, along with Robert Johnson and Lucifer himself, in the haunting god particle dirge “Higgs Boson Blues.”

“Push the Sky Away” is yet another gem in a long string of fiercely literate offerings from the poet laureate of post-punk.




Story tools

Email  Email   Print  Print   Reprint  Reprint   Popular  Most Popular   Subscribe  Subscribe

Share this story


© 2013 The Akron Beacon Journal  ●  Ohio.com  ●  Enjoy  ● 44 E. Exchange Street, Akron, Ohio 44308