2 Wild Mood Swings the cure Elektra Recorded in Jane Seymore’s house in Bath, England, where The Cure was living more than recording, Wild Mood Swings took four years in the making, allowing them to d6, redo, and do over again to make the album what it is now— worth the anxious four year wait that fans had to endure. The title is so amazingly appropriate. Admittedly, The Cure has’ had eclectic albums in the past, but on none other has this group gone between — such extremes. Wish came close, but the emotions on this album are all too intense for comparison. ‘Mint Car’ is like ‘Friday I’m In Love’ on overkill (a good overkill, though), while ‘Jupiter Crash’ is singer/songwriter Robert Smith at his absolute most depressing. ‘Club America’ is the hardest song to get accustomed to because Smith’s voice is so low. The first single, ‘The 13th,’ is an almost misleading representation of the album. But then again, it’s Machine Fish Galactic Cowboys Attic Galactic Cowboys are known (by those in the know) as some of the best cheeseball rock musicians in the universe. There is a special charm to really good musicians playing really comy music really well, and metal is, ipso facto, corny music. The Cowboys have always played lighthearted music with sometimes comical lyrics, but with darker underlying themes, both musically and lyrically, that occasionally seep and seethe to the surface. Consider the disturbing ‘Kill nearly impossible to choose one track that speaks for the entire album. The Cure still shimmers with that little bit of aloofness fans have learned to love, “tomorrow I know I'll feel bad/ but I really couldn’t care about that.” ‘Jupiter Crash’ connects the heavens to the earth in a slower, more melodic tune about a ruthless woman who couldn’t appreciate him after their p hvyes ica | encounter, drawing cosmic comparisons to Jupiter being smashed by an incoming comet. It expresses just how difficult it is to get up into this hellish world to try to make life fun again. “So much for gravity,” he cries. With new a drummer, Jason Cooper, and a re tarp nang keyboardist from Disintegration, Roger O’Donnell, Wild Mood Swings closes by reminding audiences that The Cure will not live forever (gasp!). The album has a very sad ending allowable only by the Goth God himself, “but holding onto used to be is not enough,/ memory’s not life, and it’s not love/you know we’ve reached the end, you just don’t know why/I will never forget.” by rachel young and hilary price and-stomp-it-into-the-ground opening ‘Feel the Rage’ to the slow burning power ballad-esque ‘Arrow,’ the themes of anger, pain, stress and fear are clearer on this album then on either of their previous releases. The trademark vocal harmonies are still here, albeit less exposed than on previous Cowboy albums, and they can still pull off some of the funkiest heavy metal this side of Living Colour (a comparison perhaps not that far off, considering the liberal use of samples on Machine Fish). The humour is still here, but is only fully realized on “Psychotic Companion,” a mock-out on all those late night TV psychic lines. The Other Cure Revi Wild Mood Swing: Blah blah blah After the bloody mess that was 19 something had to be done. Having nm album so bad that it ended with the b eulogy, it was clear The Cure couldn’! They had to prove that they weren’t was uninspired, which was a safe assump time. The strategy? Release another Wis better job of it this time. Wild Mood Swings frequently co images of “Wish, Part Two.” Don’t be Both albums open with what appears to t song. Wild’s ‘Want’ has an identica Wish’s ‘Open,’ as well as striking m lyrical similarities. Both albums end respective longest tracks with Rob begging someone (or everyone) to differently. The two albums sound m¢ than any other two Cure albums, surprising, as the four year lapse be albums .is the longest hiatus the Cure There are also nods to Wish throughout For instance, Wilds ‘Trap’ is a respons ‘Cut’ where the same dysfunctional rela explored from opposite sides of the fe helpless hands helplessly pulling you | to me/I wish you felt the way that I still a desperate, insecure, love-addicted Robe to which a contemptuous Robert respa the way you want me to be sick of it all Of course, one has never had to cross one Cure record to the next in order to { divergent takes on love. They have al conveniently located within individu: Wild Mood Swings is an appropriate 1 would have for any Cure album since | Ten Seconds Ten Seconds Discipline Record: Singer/guitarist Bill Forth is infatuate: with guitar craft guru Robert Fripp. So that he convinced King Fripp to play ¢ of 10 tracks on Ten Seconds self titled debut. Musically, Jen Seconds (the album) is an odd mix of King Crimson, Fripp’s trademark Soundscapes, and a weird sort of industrio-ambient. Lofty