Patch The Sky (LP)

 
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Bob Mould
Patch The Sky (LP)

[ Merge / LP ]

Release Date: Saturday 26 March 2016

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At the core of these songs is what I call the chemical chorus - you hear it once and your brain starts tingling. The heart rate picks up. It gets worse - you know it's coming again and you can barely stand the anticipation. Then, the beautifully heartbreaking bridge appears, and you're all set up, hooked for life. Music is an incredibly powerful drug. I want to be your drug dealer. I have what you need - Bob Mould

If ever there was a case to be made for the late career hot streak, Bob Mould is making it. After spending much of the 2000s lost in a fog of self-examination that didn't always make for compelling music, Mould roared back in 2012 with Silver Age, a record on which he once again embraced the loud guitars of his storied Hüsker Dü youth. He also appeared to stop fighting against one of his greatest talents: the ability to write perfect pop-punk songs that feel and sound like getting punched in the face (in the best possible way). 2014's Beauty & Ruin mined similar sonic territory, furthering the rip and roar of Silver Age without necessarily bettering it.

On Patch the Sky Mould seems to be at peace, if not with the world at large, at least in regards to the way he can best address it. He may always be one of rock and roll's great contrarians-angry, angsty, and loud-but after nearly 35 years of making records, he no longer seems determined to be kicking against his own strengths. In fact, he's finally embracing them. "I'm a really good rhythm guitar player, a fair vocalist, and a pretty simple songwriter," Mould recently told the New York Times. "Now that I've come to accept that, it's much easier to work with." To that end, Patch the Sky has a remarkable sense of clarity-playing like a record that is less concerned with reinventing the wheel as opposed to simply refining it.

"Can I find some truth within the noise?" Mould asks on opening track "Voices in My Head." It's a question that the rest of Patch the Sky answers with a resounding yes. The best tracks on the record are the most furiously full-throttled, many of which threaten to drown out Mould's voice entirely. "The End of Things" lets fly with one of the best riffs Mould has written in a decade, bashed out with the kind of stupid raw enthusiasm that brings to mind the best of his Sugar output back in the '90s. Similarly, tracks like "Daddy's Favorite," "Pray For Rain," and "Hands Are tied" (a punked out rave up that revs up and explodes in under two minutes) all provide the gleeful no-nonsense squall of the world's most amped garage band.

Joined by drummer Jon Wurster and bassist Jason Narducy, Mould seems to be having a genuinely good time here, even when the subject matter veers directly (and somewhat predictably, for Mould) into apocalyptic territory ("Lucifer and God") or tries to unpack frazzled relationships ("You Say You"). Mould still sounds best when he's articulating anger at a high volume, and Patch the Sky succeeds largely because these songs sound as if they were hardwired to raw nerves. It's only when the songs slow down slightly ("Hold On," "Black Confetti") that they start to feel like a generic slog.

While he might never be able to duplicate the desperate urgency of his iconic punk rock past, Mould more than makes up with it in terms of sheer intensity. At 55, Mould has managed to do a bit of everything, his career having come full circle several times over. His voice-an odd, atonal yelp-still sounds the most absolutely right when paired with overdriven guitars. "I keep searching, hoping, waiting for the sun that always shines so bright on everyone," he sings on album closer "Monument" providing a little light amid the dissonance. The songs here aren't necessarily breaking new ground stylistically, but that really isn't what matters. At this point, Mould clearly has nothing left to prove.
7.0 / 10.0 Pitchfork

Tracks:

SIDE A
1. Voices in My Head
2. The End of Things
3. Hold On
4. You Say You
5. Losing Sleep
6. Pray For Rain

SIDE B
7. Lucifer and God
8. Daddy's Favorite
9. Hands Are Tied
10. Black Confetti
11. Losing Time
12. Monument