Rehumanizer

Rehumanizer

by Maserati
Rehumanizer

Rehumanizer

by Maserati

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

$27.99 
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Overview

By the time Rehumanizer arrived in 2015, the fusion of post-rock, John Carpenter's film music, and space rock -- of which Maserati are prime examples -- had been going on long enough that it felt due for a revival (indeed, Carpenter also released his first non-score music that year). Maserati's discography is wide and deep enough that they can easily draw on aspects of what they've already done, especially since they were forced to reinvent themselves after drummer Jerry Fuchs' death in 2009. Since his passing, the band has focused on their proggier, spacier aspects than their dance leanings, a transition that started with 2012's Maserati VII. Rehumanizer travels even farther down that road, its very title hinting at its more organic sound. The album finds Maserati sounding more "rock" than they have in some time, whether on galloping tracks like "Living Cell" or moodier ones such as "Mones Jura," where the grit and muscle remain underneath the gated drums and synth strings. The one song that could truly be called danceable is "End of Man," a vocodered piece of robot rock that makes the way Matt Cherry intones "institutional" into an unlikely but undeniable hook. Instead, Rehumanizer's main attractions are its rock epics. "No Cave" is a bold statement of intent, with synth drones and arpeggios that soon give way to ten minutes of expertly structured space rock that let the band be both forceful and subtle; the way that quieter elements, like the delayed guitars that float like vapor trails, hold their own among the towering drums and riffage is fascinating. Taken as a suite, "Rehumanizer I" and "Rehumanizer II" are just as impressive, with the former track cruising along on an unyielding rhythm guitar that acts like an afterburner, while the latter begins with what sounds like a more menacing version of the opening riff to "I Ran So Far Away," although the overall impression is more a murder of crows than A Flock of Seagulls. A leaner, at times heavier album than its predecessor, Rehumanizer still satisfies as it proves that Maserati's music is built for endurance as well as speed. ~ Heather Phares

Product Details

Release Date: 05/28/2021
Label: Temporary Residence
UPC: 0656605325712
Rank: 105727

Tracks

  1. No Cave
  2. Living Cell
  3. Montes Jura
  4. End of Man
  5. Rehumanizer I
  6. Rehumanizer I

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