Friday 28 March 2014

There Is No Other Time


"This record is very much about the present, an emotionally honest album about technological and personal progression,” brags Klaxon’s drummer, Jamie Reynolds to NME. Here, ‘present’ really means ‘insignificant’ and ‘technological’ is now a copy-and-paste remix edition of an outdated and monotonous club track. It seems then, The Klaxons, who once dazzled music critics and fans with their masterpiece debut in 2007, haven’t progressed in the slightest. Seven years on and a tepid second album later, things are relentlessly looking bleak if ‘There is No Other Time’ is anything to go by. What once was a band jammed with dense elements, quirky lyrics and exhilarating musical ideas, is now a band producing irritating, catchy-but-in-a-bad-way music that quite frankly, belongs nowhere else but Eurovision song contest.

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