Tuesday 11 December 2012

Older albums revisited: Meltdown

I discovered Ash through Kerrang, back in the day when I still thought that magazine was worth following. They actually featured a useful article, which was a guide to the essential bands of an average present-day rock fan. Among all the AC/DCs, Metallicas, Placebos and Jimmy Eat Worlds, there was a band I hadn't heard of before but started to love them straight away. (As a matter of fact, that guide is still on Kerrang's webstite.)

As clichéd as it may sound, in the following years, Ash became one of the bands that helped to form my taste in music. I used to spin their records endlessly. From the sophomore album 1977, which approprietly kicks off with the sound of a TIE fighter passing by, to their last, much darker, Twilight of the Innocent. Because above all, the band has always stayed unbelievably consistent throughout the years. You won't run into many weaker songs in their discography. Instead, you are bound to find lots of brilliant ones.


Shining Light is the band's biggest selling single to date and was also covered by Annie Lennox. There can be no better invitation into their music...
Free All Angeles might the their most popular album so far, since it contains the phenomenal singles Shining Light and Burn Baby Burn and was their biggest critical success to date. It's most probably the best showcase of Ash's ability to write truly great lovesongs, as well as the tenderness and vulnerability in their music.

Although I treasure all their albums deeply, Meltdown have always remained my favourite. (Or perhaps on par with Free All Angeles, the more I think about it.) It presented a much darker and heavier side of Ash, with the sound infused with even a dash of metal at times. Thankfully however, that doesn't mean their melodic sensibilities got lost in the mix. If anything, the exact opposite thing happened. From the opening title track to the closer Vampire Love, the songs are all killer, no filler. And they're all so damn fun and catchy, with guitar riffs you just can't get out of your head.


Well, I guess I can't praise this band enough. Simply put, I think Ash are one of the most underappreciated and overlooked bands on the planet. They must be shaking hands with Feeder and Idlewild somewhere right now. It's a shame, really, that Ash refuse to release any more albums after Twilight of the Innocent, focusing only on stand-alone singles. Because if those are of any indication, fans would've had much to look forward to.



Thouhgts?

1 comment:

  1. Really like their song, "Shining Light". I'll definitely have to give them more of a listen.

    ReplyDelete