Wolfmother - Cosmic Egg (2009)
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Wolfmother
Cosmic Egg
Tracks
1. California Queen 2. New Moon Rising 3. White Feather 4. Sundial 5. In The Morning 6. 10,000 Feet 7. Cosmic Egg 8. Far Away 9. Pilgrim 10. In The Castle 11. Phoenix 12. Violence Of The Sun
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Review by Ben Vernel
During
my listen-through of Wolfmother's long-awaited second album "Cosmic
Egg", my iTunes pulled a swifty and shuffled to an older WM track, The White Unicorn.
Not only was it a track from the previous album, but it was the EP version (released 2004, a good five years ago).
The contrast between the track I'd listened to just prior (Sundial,
track four on "Cosmic Egg") and the older EP cut was palpable. The 2004
EP, the band's first release, was sludgy and fuzzy and anything but
polished.
It didn't feel derivative, it felt authentic.
The
2005 release of their debut, self-titled album stripped away a lot of
that authenticity, buffing the band's seventies rock veneer to a
sun-like radiance.
The songwriting talent of Stockdale was
brought to the forefront but the atmosphere was lost. "Cosmic Egg" has
seen yet another tonal shift.
Where the Wolfmother EP was
lo-fi fuzz rock and the self-titled album was polished
seventies-influenced rock'n'roll, "Cosmic Egg" is loud, hard stoner
rock reminiscent of Kyuss and Black Sabbath with some pop-rock
sensibilities mixed in.
The idea of heavy riffage and incredibly
catchy songwriting is not unfamiliar; American stoner band CKY
perfected the concept on pinnacle release "Infiltrate.Destroy.Rebuild".
Here, Wolfmother blend said concept with their sixties and
seventies influences and come up with something that, on first listen,
might sound like a dull, heavy bunch of faux-metal and is, however,
anything but.
Highlights include amazingly rifftastic Pilgrim, aforementioned Sundial, Led Zeppelin-esque In The Morning, the refreshingly upbeat and undeniably vintage White Feather and Far Away, which features some breathtakingly hook-laden songwriting and some great guitar solos.
I've
been a fan of Wolfmother since before their first release and I've
followed them through the popularity, the hiatus, the speculation and
the line-up change.
My verdict on Cosmic Egg?
It's
been worth the wait. For those new to Wolfmother and who like a heavier
style of rock, you might want to check this out. You could be in for a
pleasant surprise.
RATING: 4 out of 5
Brought To You By The Dwarf
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