THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS
COME WITH US

Astralwerks
Pass the Acid Test
by Marshall Bowden
Pop the new Chemical Brothers album, Come
With Us into your CD player, and let the genie out of
the bottle. A flurry of soundtrack strings plays and a booming
voice commands "Come with us/And leave your Earth behind...Behold/They
are coming back" Then those big beats start pumping in earnest
and you are falling down the rabbit hole. You're taking
the ride, and you may not be back in time for dinner.
If you've taken the ride with the Chems before
you know you're in good hands. Unlike many of their electronica
brethren, the Chemical Brothers have always displayed a
good understanding of rock music and of song structures.
Even their early albums, like Exit Planet Dust demonstrated
an ability to combine and juxtapose sounds and energies
in a way that created a total experience rather than simply
a collection of samples held together with some beats and
electronic blips. Then you have the their psychedelic leanings.
The Brothers have understood the potentially psychedelic
nature of electronic music since they started out. Many
of today's sampling whippersnappers couldn't tell a Tangerine
Dream groove from a Can track, but you can bet these groovy
druids can. By 1997's Dig Your Own Hole they were
mining the Timothy Leary groove seriously on tracks like
"Lost in the K-Hole" and "It Doesn't Matter", which sampled
Lothar and the Hand People, a group built around a theremin.
The album concluded with "The Private Psychedelic Reel"
which, while flawed, certainly signaled their intentions.
They also understood the power of vocals and have featured
guest appearances on every album from singers such as Noel
Gallagher, Bernard Sumner, and Hope Sandoval. Then there's
sweet soul sister Beth Orton who has successfully collaborated
with the Chems on the amazing tracks "Where Do I Begin"
and "Alive Alone". Orton combined electronic experiments
and acoustic folk soul convincingly on her debut disc Trailer
Park and has proven a durable and skilled songwriter,
but no "Best of Beth" set would be complete without her
Chemical collaborations.
Basically, the Chemical Brothers are rock
fans with an incredible album collection who want to share
their favorite moments with dancefloor denizens. It is this
deeper resonance with the sounds of popular culture from
the last four decades that gives the Chemical Brothers their
edge and makes them cool even among those who aren't particularly
into electronica and dance music. Rock and roll meets acid
house-that has defined the Chemical Brothers sound from
their early days as DJs at Jeff Barrett's "Heavenly Social"
straight through Exit Planet Dust, Dig Your Own
Hole, and "Setting Sun".
On their last outing, 1999's Surrender
the Brothers shifted into a less muscular, more synth-driven
sound, recalling their forebears Kraftwerk and other '70s/'80s
influences. Though I personally found the single "Hey Boy
Hey Girl" to be a pretty annoying anthemic stomp, Surrender
had much to recommend it, including Bernard Sumner's Joy
Division-esque vocalizing on "Out of Control". Still, it
seemed that the Chemical boys had reached an impasse and
it was far from clear whether they would head toward a more
synthesized electro-dance sound or return to the more rock-oriented
muscle of their best work.
In a way they've managed to do both, but the
beats are definitely back. The opener, "Come With Us" locks
into the beats and tribal boy chants of Exit Planet Dust,
throwing in synthesizer arpeggios and the aforementioned
"genie" voice to create a groove that should have no problems
filling dance floors from Manchester to Ibiza. Likewise
"It Began In Afrika", a kind of electronic exotica where
the various percussion (both sampled and real), big cat
sounds, and travelogue narrator sample combine to create
an ersatz aural safari a la Les Baxter. The polyrhythmic
percussion flights (timbales and bongos) are like a cross
between a Sanatana concert and the Grateful Dead parking
lot. Overall, though, the track is strong and trades on
the aggressive Chemical beats sound while throwing a new
angle into the mix that is sure to delight listeners and
dancers. From there we spin into the funky "Galaxy Bounce"
which again is vintage Chemical territory. The new disc
is off to an amazing start, recalling the group's best work.
You expect a changeup on "Star Guitar" and
the intro, with some stuttering handclaps and synthesizer
noise promises it, but when the beat hits you are once again
in familiar territory. This is a bit of a mellow track despite
the strong beat, and demonstrates very well the adage that
it is what goes on top of the beats that makes a dance or
electronic track what it is. "Hoops" turns out to be the
change we were looking for, with its weird Association sample
("Round Again") spun into a minor key acoustic guitar calliope
that morphs into a groove not unlike something from Orbital's
Middle of Nowhere.
The second half of Come With Us takes
us deep into space (or our own minds, whichever you prefer),
opening with the nervous "My Elastic Eye", with it's "Tic
Tac Nocturne" sample recalling, in an updated way, the opening
of Pink Floyd's "Time." It opens up to some fierce bass
synth riffing and an ostinato figure that plays over it,
underlining the element of time that seems to be the track's
overriding theme. This sets up the complete chill out of
"The State We're In", a gorgeous piece of hippy balladry
that reunites the Brothers with Beth Orton. Orton delivers
the song with her trademark Britfolk delivery punctuated
by a leaning on blue notes that creates a real organic feel
even as you're being tripped out into the far reaches of
the universe. "We like working with people who have talents
we don't have" says Tom Rowlands (the spectacled Brother).
"They take the track away, get a feeling from it, and it
becomes their own song." "The State We're In" ends by bubbling
into a nice dance beat that segues easily into the hash
house disco of "Denmark". It's a fierce dance track and
nothing less. "Pioneer Skies" opens with what could be a
Syd Barrett-era Floyd harpsichord motif, and indeed we seem
to get firmly into Floyd territory as various sounds (including
more Dark Side of the Moon-style clock sounds) are
fed over a bubbling floor-tom driven drum track. The track
becomes increasingly epic, though, and manages to recall
some type of Pete Townshend opus by the end, something intended
for Lighthouse or Quadrophenia.
Of course, the final track on Chemical Brothers
CDs ("Alive Alone", "The Private Psychedelic Reel", "Dream
On") is usually something major, something that either takes
the whole disc to another level or provides a big surprise,
and "The Test" is no exception. Richard Ashcroft comes in
to provide energetic, acerbic vocals that rail against a
huge beat and a synthesized wall of whirring sound that
seems to drop straight into some abyss. The track ends with
Ashcroft demanding "Did I pass/The acid test/Did I pass/The
acid test", once again reminding the listener of the Chemical
Brothers' complete understanding of the dynamics of the
truly psychedelic experience.
Some folks are going to be antsy for the Chemical
Brothers to move along to the Next Big Thing in electronic
music, and Come With Us, while highly successful
on its own terms, isn't it. But Tom Rolands and Ed Simons
do what they do better than anyone else out there and they
demonstrate on this album that they still have a few tricks
up their sleeves to keep the formula fresh even though it's
familiar. By their next outing, the Brothers will indeed
have to work it out and come up with something we've not
heard from them before, but right now, I'm perfectly happy
to slip down the rabbit hole and take the acid test with
them one more time.
