The Dead Weather – Horehound, Album Review

Click on the turntable on the left to listen to a continuous stream of music featured on Pretty Much Amazing - updated every day. For more, you can check out the Best Songs of 2011, or our Best Albums of 2011.

The Dead Weather   Horehound, Album Review reviews music albumreviews The Dead Weather
Horehound

Warner Brothers
out July 14th

76/100
[Rating Scale]
The Dead Weather   Horehound, Album Review reviews music albumreviews

[rating:76/100]
The Dead Weather is a blues-rock band comprised of Jack White (The White Stripes), Dean Fertila (Queens of the Stone Age), Alison Mosshart (The Kills), and Jack Lawrence (The Raconteurs). If you haven’t heard ‘em yet, don’t feel bad. They fired things up on March 11, 2009 and Horehound, their debut album, was released in the middle of last month. They’re being billed as a supergroup, and after hearing the record, I’m good with that.

My first impression of this album was that it felt like each song was recorded in a garage with foam padding stapled to the walls. I don’t mean that in a bad way… I’m actually saying it as a major compliment. Do you remember early grunge? That stuff felt like it’d never been streamed through a computer before it hit your ears. In contrast, most of today’s music has been processed and mastered within an inch of its life. That processing, mixing, and mastering takes work (and is an art in and of itself), but there are things that make The Dead Weather’s sound authentic, and their gritty garage sound is one of them. You put this record on, close your eyes, and you feel like you’re sitting dingy recording space hearing musicians that love to rock. The rawness of Horehound is a welcome return to what has made rock & roll art.

The grittiness of the album comes through a marriage of blues and rock that runs through Horehound almost interchangeably. “I Cut Like a Buffalo” blows the lid off the album with its opening riffs, organs, bass lines, throat clucks, and harmonized shouting. These Techniques aren’t typical devices that people go for, but for some reason it just works here. This song stuck in my head for hours afterward and it was certainly one of my favorites.

[audio=http://pmatunes.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/03-i-cut-like-a-buffalo.mp3,The Dead Weather - I Cut Like A Buffalo]

Part of the intrigue of the album is Jack White as the master of beats. Having him drive sound from a kit is a gutty and pretty intriguing move. His presence is stamped all over this album, but differently then it is in the White Stripes or Raconteurs. In “60 Feet Tall” the rolling rim checks put you on immediate notice that you’re going to rock. By the time the melody actually comes in, I’d bought into the song completely. The drums are creative and strategically used by White, and he adds depth in sound and substance to the entire album.

“Will There Be Enough Water” has a molasses filled, slinky, bluesy kind’ve feel. It slugs along making you feel dirty and dangerous simultaneously. Despite being a tad long, it’s a great outro for an album that spent ten songs slugging you in the gut with rock hooks & beats.

[audio=http://pmatunes.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/11-will-there-be-enough-water.mp3,The Dead Weather - Will There Be Enough Water]

These aren’t all songs I’m listening to on a daily basis, but that’s good. To me, Horehound feels more like an event than a day-to-day experience. I like music that pushes its genre, and what you get from this band is smart rock. This isn’t just a bunch of power chords strung together to chorus after chorus of feel good teen lyrics. It’s not catchy bubble-gum rock; it’s a brand of rock that will peel paint off walls.

One of the more subtle, but cool aspects of Horehound are the western themes.   Lyrics like “far from your weapon,” “whiskey,” and “cut like a buffalo,” reinforce the rugged, Clint Eastwood-esce grit. The western-ness runs a steel ribbon of authenticity through the project. It feels like so many of today’s musicians are musicians for hire… seemingly in it more for the dollar and less for the music. I’m not saying that The Dead Weather doesn’t like the cash that comes with the music, but there’s something about this record that feels real. It doesn’t feel formulaic and it doesn’t feel like its been done before.

This album isn’t for everyone. The first half of the record is a bit stronger than the second, and I’m sure there will be people that hate it. Regardless, the record should give anyone that gives it a legit listen a new-found respect for each member of the band. You can dislike renaissance art, and still appreciate Michelangelo… and even if you dislike Horehound it’s pretty clear that something fresh and powerful is coming from a legitimate supergroup.

Ed. Note: Are you interested in writing about music? We'd love to hear from you! Email us with samples and a short bio.

{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

Aryl W August 24, 2009 at 8:34 am

I love the album. Like Jeff says, not all the songs are great, but several are. I love Cut like a Buffalo, it’s like a rocking reggae song. Love Jack on the drums too. Continually amazed at how much music he puts out that is so good. The marketing of this album ‘golden tickets’ & the like are cool to watch too. Anything that gets more Jack White out is OK with me. Next supergroup please !

Reply

Mohammad Choudhery August 24, 2009 at 12:48 pm

Great album. I especially love the instrumental track: “3 Birds”.

Reply

tess August 24, 2009 at 4:36 pm

hi! I’ve been reading your blog for ages now and thought maybe you’d enjoy my music. I’m a London based artist from Toronto and my major influences are Cat Power, The Kills and Elliott Smith …etc. etc. etc. I hope you enjoy!

http://www.myspace.com/tessnormaparks

xxx
tess

Reply

Aaron August 24, 2009 at 8:54 pm

Hey, i just wanted to chime in and say that i really strongly agree with the points made in this review. And i mean strongly!

ever since the album leaked i’ve been talking about how this album is like an environment. you just have to listen from start to finish and you’ll feel like you’re actually in this dank old blues venue.

The album > than the songs it is composed of, and that’s just art right there

Reply

Lyle Hopwood August 26, 2009 at 1:45 am

Love this album. I enjoy the care that’s been taken to make it immediate and one-of-a-kind. The crickets audible through the studio windows on the last track, for instance – a ‘found’ sound that anchors the song as a particular performance, wrenching it away from being just a generic archetype of the song.

Reply

Becky August 30, 2009 at 6:54 pm

Had the oppourtunity to see them in Los Angeles recently and Alison Mosshart left me stunned. She and Jack have great chemistry which is palpable both on stage and on the album. No Hassle Night and Will There Be Enough Water are my favorites. Alison is ferocious!

Reply

Seth September 2, 2009 at 12:00 am

The Dead Weather put on an amazing live performance, saw them last weekend in Vancouver. Alison creates a great connection with the audience. Would suggest seeing them while you can

Reply

Leave a Comment

Even though we weren’t entirely impressed with The xx’s debut album, we are not blind to the fact that many of you did like it. Seriously. So I figured you…

Keep Reading...

I am finally getting into Music Go Music. Mostly because they released an awesome video for their delightfully dance-y  9-minute epic, “Warm In The Shadows,” which then triggered an intense…

Keep Reading...

Simian Mobile Disco Temporary Pleasure Witchita out September 1st 54/100 [Rating Scale] [rating:54/100] Simian Mobile Disco offer up their sophomore studio album with an array of of color, texture and…

Keep Reading...

Addictive looping keyboard beat? Mid-tempo dance groove? Nonchalant confident delivery? And a video launching the singer into space? Sounds like DFA has another hit on their hands with the Juan…

Keep Reading...

When the guitar strums start on “Two” and Peter Silberman sings about how he was sleeping sitting up I almost hear Conor Oberst wishing he only had one desire; almost…

Keep Reading...

Pictureplane is making Denver all kinds of awesome. His real name is Travis Egedy, and I think that’s pretty cool. Pictureplane’s debut album Dark Rift came out on August 4th…

Keep Reading...

Props to Hot Bizzies for pointing me to Houston-based electro-quartet. They nail them right on the head with comparisons to The Presets and Cut Copy. “No Survivor” has an atmospheric…

Keep Reading...

Yesterday I told you guys that Green Owl had released The Very Best’s single, “Warm Heart of Africa” featuring Vampire Weekend frontman Ezra Koenig on a 7″ record. Today we’re…

Keep Reading...

August 19, 2009· 0 reactions

Joker

Dubstep. I’m not an expert on the subject, I’m merely a catechized fan of the extraordinary and bewildering sounds. The chops and drops make my head spin. The lack of…

Keep Reading...