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In
Devon, no-one can hear you scream. MUSE's story is the familiar
tale of late-teen provincial hell and, hailing from the dead-end
resort of Teignmouth, it's no wonder they've fashioned themselves
as champions of black-clad outsider chic. Apathy is not an option,
hanging around the common room looking a bit mysterious is.
Their debut LP is a deadly serious affair then, and inevitably draws
comparisons to Radiohead. John Leckie ('The Bends') produces, serrated
guitars rule and happiness is discarded as a premise only suitable
for emotional retards.
The problem though, after setting up such an academic concept, is
that 'Showbiz' is not as clever as they think it is. True, it never
mopes as morosely as Thom Yorke's lot, but then it doesn't always
have the ability to lift the soul either. So 'Unintended' and the
title track are overwrought, prone to excruciatingly bad pseudo
poetry, and barely escape the tag of being a gothier Strangelove.
But if they sometimes go too far, MUSE's high sense of drama makes
perfect sense elsewhere. Mixing Radiohead with the odd flounce of
early Suede, or the wailing algebraic lunacy of Mansun, they can
produce mini epics. 'Uno' is an Addams Family flamenco, jaggedly
wallowing in unrequited love, just one small step away from an injunction
for stalking, while 'Cave' and 'Fillip' are superior takes on the
well-worn path of brooding guitar pop.
In view of all this, that title is the closest they get to a joke
- because it seems certain MUSE would rather peel back emotional
scabs than actually go whoring down the Met Bar. It's not for the
frivolous, but with a little fine tuning, escape from an oblivious
West Country seems increasingly likely.
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