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The Guide: Preview music: New Singles

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  • The Guide: Preview music: New Singles

    The Guide: PREVIEW music: NEW SINGLES

    The Guardian - United Kingdom; Aug 27, 2005

    IAN GITTINS



    GORILLAZ Dare (Parlophone) A decade on from the bloodiest conflict of
    the Britpop wars, it's absurd to reflect that we even fleetingly
    considered the Gallagher brothers creatively superior to Damon
    Albarn. Yet the Blur man is largely absent from this latest, excellent
    Gorillaz offering, a winningly facetious collage of futuristic
    electro-doodles and squelches which is marred only by a post-pub
    Mancunian dosser slurring a passable impersonation of Shameless
    patriarch Frank Gallagher through the open studio window. Oh no, hang
    on, that's special guest star Shaun Ryder!

    * GWEN STEFANI Cool (Interscope) She's a helium-voiced Valley Girl,
    her lyrics and interviews are packed with self-regarding Californian
    psychobabble and her ambition makes her look pretty ugly, yet Stefani
    has a sure-footed pop sensibility that consistently renders her
    confections hugely beguiling. Cooing over the vexed subject of
    maintaining a civilised relationship with an ex-lover, Cool is yet
    another surprisingly palatable cut from her ludicrously named, sugar
    rush of an album, Love Angel Music Baby.

    * THE DANDY WARHOLS Smoke It (Parlophone) The Dandy Warhols may be
    poised to enjoy a second wind thanks to Dig!, the film about their
    arch rivalry with the Brian Jonestown Massacre, next to whom they
    resemble Cliff Richard and the Shadows. Here they salvage their own
    hard-earned reputation for narcotic excess with a thrilling,
    hyperventilating shambles of an Iggy-meets-the-Stones number that
    doggedly pursues its misguided train of thought to oblivion and
    beyond. Excellent.

    * SYSTEM OF A DOWN Question (American Recordings) This ambitious
    venture finds the Armenia-via-California thrash rockers striving to
    answer the biggest existential questions of them all: what is the
    meaning of life, and where do we go when we die? All is made clear as,
    over alternately symphonic and thunderous shock-metal, they deliver a
    remarkable verdict: "Sweet berries ready for two/Ghosts are no
    different than you." We've needed this for years: a Jean-Paul Sartre
    you can mosh to.

    * PRAS Haven't Found (Universal) Next to the lustrous Lauryn Hill and
    the ubiquitous Wyclef Jean, the relatively anonymous Pras Michel was
    perennially doomed to be The Other One of the Fugees. Here, he
    attempts to vault back into public affection by appropriating the
    skyscraping guitar riff of U2's I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking
    For and mumbling over the top about how very ace he is. Diddy would
    consider this record lazy and exploitative. Those are not words to use
    lightly.
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