LOS
ANGELES With a sound that combines fury with the ethereal,
the Brit-rock band Muse soon will deliver something rock fans have
been lacking for too long, according to frontman Matthew Bellamy.
"It's
just that soul element," the singer/songwriter/guitarist said
about his band's debut, Showbiz (Sept. 28). "I'm not saying
that what we do is the way music should be. But I think that there's
been a lack of that type of music for a while. ... Any new generation
that comes, they need something like that."
Bellamy
pointed to 1991's Nevermind by Seattle grunge-rockers Nirvana and
1995's The Bends by Brit-rock act Radiohead as the albums that most
recently brought forth that kind of soul.
Showbiz,
from Maverick Records, shows the influence of both those bands while
showcasing Muse's ability to create music with a colossal sense
of drama. The trio's passionately performed songs push and pull
listeners with expansive dynamics and unlikely juxtapositions.
The
opening track, "Sunburn", begins with haunting piano that
suggests a piece of classical music, then it crashes into a rock
chorus. Initially shimmering in the background, Bellamy's vocals
erupt with the music, proclaiming, "She burns like the sun."
The
album's first single, "Muscle Museum" which was
released to modern-rock radio Tuesday also has a somewhat
subdued opening, starting with a bed of ominous bass and drowsy
flamenco guitar. Bellamy's vocals, delicate during the verses, explode
on the grunge-like chorus as he pleads, "I don't want you to
ignore me when it pleases you/ So I'll do it on my own."
Bellamy's
ability to shift his voice into falsetto often takes the emotion
in Muse's songs to startling heights. On the ballad "Unintended"
his vocal floats over a lonesome acoustic guitar and then dramatically
rises.
Bellamy
said his writing required him to expand his vocal range. "Every
song I write seems to push it further," he said.
Though
you probably wouldn't guess it from the maturity of their music,
the three members of Muse are fresh out of their teens.
But
as they discussed their album while sitting on the pool deck of
L.A.'s Standard Hotel wearing T-shirts and shorts, Bellamy, bassist
Chris Wolstenholme and drummer Dominic Howard seemed just like the
20-year-old guys they are.
As
the slight, dark-haired Bellamy did most of the talking, Wolstenholme
and Howard listened intently, allowing him to answer first and chiming
in only occasionally.
When
asked about the inspiration for "Muscle Museum"
which debuted on Radio & Records' alternative specialty show
chart at #7 this week Bellamy told a fictional story about
traveling to an island in Greece with his girlfriend and meeting
a guitar-playing spy who taught him the song's riff.
Finally,
getting serious, he said, "I think I'm being honest, do you
know what I mean? I'd say the themes on this record are frustration".
"Love,"
Howard added.
"Love,
boredom," Bellamy continued. "It's everything in life.
What's life? Sex, frustration, boredom."
Bellamy,
Wolstenholme and Howard, who grew up in the seaside town of Teignmouth
in the south of England, have been playing in bands together since
they were 13, first in the mostly covers band Gothic Plague and
later in Fixed Penalty and Rocket Baby Dolls.
"We've
just grown up together," Wolstenholme said, explaining the
band's chemistry. "We all sort of share the same views on music
as well."
"For
us, [forming a band] was like something to do other than just hang
around and do drugs, you know?" added Bellamy.
They
officially became Muse in 1997, and their first gig under that name
was a local battle of the bands, which they won based on their goth
makeup rather than the strength of their music, according to Bellamy,
adding that they dropped the goth look shortly thereafter.
They
said they picked the name Muse because it came between "muscle"
and "museum" in the dictionary and because they
liked the meaning of the word. As they grew more serious about performing
as Muse, the trio cut out all covers from their repertoire and focused
on honing their own sound.
"As
soon as we did that, no one came to any of our gigs," Bellamy
said. "So for years it was just empty venues. Somehow we decided
to stick with that, because we never wanted to play to crowds who
didn't come to hear our music. We really wanted it to be our music."
They
signed a UK deal in 1998; that same year, U.S. labels began expressing
interest. The band eventually signed with Madonna's Maverick imprint
on Christmas Eve.
Muse
created some stateside buzz following their performance at Woodstock
'99 last month and industry showcases in New York and Los Angeles.
Onstage at the band's July 30 show at the Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood,
Calif., Bellamy, Wolstenholme and Howard appeared confident yet
entirely immersed in the music they were creating.
As
Howard pummeled away at his drums, Wolstenholme often faced him
while thrashing around with his bass. Bellamy rarely looked up from
his guitar or the stage floor, contorting his face as though he
were exorcising demons.
Chino
Moreno, frontman for thrash-rocking labelmates the Deftones, and
Fieldy (born Reg Arvizu), bassist of the chart-topping rock-rap
act Korn, were among those who turned up to catch Muse in action.
"I
thought they were really good," Fieldy said. "The drummer
was dope."
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