Logo
DiS Needs You: Save our site »
  • Logo_home2
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • In Photos
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Search
  • Community
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • Blog
  • Community

THIS SITE HAS BEEN ARCHIVED AND CLOSED.

Please join the conversation over on our new forums »

If you really want to read this, try using The Internet Archive.

The Raveonettes

2016 Atomized

Label: Beat Dies Release Date: 17/02/2017

104492
KeenNina by Nina Keen February 27th, 2017

One of the biggest challenges for a band is pushing your sound forward without forcing creativity. The Raveonettes’ solution of moving the decade their brand of retro-electro draws on is a clever one. After a few albums with a Sixties vibe, they’ve progressed moved into a combination of Eighties and current pop that feels like a natural next step.

And it’s... often perfectly enjoyable. This latest album 2016 Atomized, a compilation of 12 monthly releases put out last year. It starts very promisingly at least. The riff on 'The World Is Empty (Without You)' is catchy, the song makes good use of textural levels - when to grow and when to hold back - and it’s basically, cleverly, made up of three different choruses. Second track 'Run Mascara Run' has a catchy title, a differently good melody and a guitar solo. But there’s no real chorus, the middle eight is a substanceless whisper, and every so often the song breaks to play just one, very different sound. Already the cracks are beginning to show. And so the rest of the album continues, on a downwards slope that’s gentle but decided.

The songs seem to exist in a pretty cloud of somehow-soft neon pink, so pretty in fact that it made me question why I wasn’t enjoying it. But the songs aren’t catchy enough to get away with being this light on substance, and the riffs and melodies very rarely deviate from the first five notes of a minor scale. It’s perfectly pleasant background listening, but it yields diminishing returns from close listening.

‘Excuses’ was a particularly grating, with its three entirely separate and incoherent musical ideas, but also with its uncomfortable lyrical concept of hate-fucking someone specified to be female. It’s not something I’m personally comfortable with the glamorising of regardless of gender, but even when sung by Sharin Foo (a woman) and regardless of any mitigating concept, a story of heterosexual hate-sex from the male perspective against a cultural backdrop of men both hating and fucking women being the norm feels specifically uncomfortable. Also the invocation of the character’s mother here and later in ‘Won’t You Leave Me Alone’ is a really weird lyrical cliché that adds nothing but another layer of discomfort that’s less easy to explain. Male self-infantilization? Vaguely oedipal character conflict? Incongruous conservatism? Whatever it is, it’s a rubbish lyrical device.

Mostly though, 2016 Atomized’s worst offence is simply its inability to grip the listener. One assumes it wasn't conceived as an album, and in shoving the tracks next to each other it's hard to come away from it with a sense of anything gained, and in the context of the album as a whole the opener ‘My World Is Empty’, at first so promising, feels almost retrospectively disappointing. It’d be a fine album track, but it’s nowhere near strong enough to stand as the strongest track on an album.

![104492](http://dis.resized.images.s3.amazonaws.com/540x310/104492.jpeg)
  • 5
    Nina Keen's Score
Log-in to rate this record out of 10
Share on
   
Love DiS? Become a Patron of the site here »


LATEST


  • Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024


  • Drowned in Sound is back!


  • Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Year: 2020


  • Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter


  • Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing


  • Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alternative must sees



Left-arrow

Dirty Projectors

Dirty Projectors

Mobback
104487
104493

Peter Silberman

Impermanence

Mobforward
Right-arrow


LATEST

    news


    Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024

  • 106145
  • news


    Drowned in Sound is back!

  • 106143

    news


    Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Y...

  • 106141
  • news


    Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter

  • 106139

    Playlist


    Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing

  • 106138
  • Festival Preview


    Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alterna...

  • 106137

    Interview


    A Different Kind Of Weird: dEUS on The Ideal Crash

  • 106136
  • Festival Review


    Way Out East: DiS Does Sharpe Festival 2019

  • 106135
MORE


    news


    The Neptune Music Prize 2016 - Vote Now

  • 103918
  • Takeover


    The Winner Takes It All

  • 50972

    Takeover


    10 Things To Not Expect Your Record Producer To...

  • 93724
  • review


    The Mars Volta - Deloused In The Comatorium

  • 4317

    review


    Sonic Youth - Nurse

  • 6044
  • feature


    New Emo Goth Danger? My Chemical Romance confro...

  • 89578

    feature


    DiS meets Justice

  • 27270
  • news


    Our Independent music filled alternative to New...

  • 104374
MORE

Drowned in Sound
  • DROWNED IN SOUND
  • HOME
  • SITE MAP
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • IN PHOTOS
  • RECORDS
  • RECOMMENDED RECORDS
  • ALBUMS OF THE YEAR
  • FESTIVAL COVERAGE
  • COMMUNITY
  • MUSIC FORUM
  • SOCIAL BOARD
  • REPORT ERRORS
  • CONTACT US
  • JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
  • FOLLOW DiS
  • GOOGLE+
  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • SHUFFLER
  • TUMBLR
  • YOUTUBE
  • RSS FEED
  • RSS EMAIL SUBSCRIBE
  • MISC
  • TERM OF USE
  • PRIVACY
  • ADVERTISING
  • OUR WIKIPEDIA
© 2000-2025 DROWNED IN SOUND