Muse: Drones – Orwell, Here We Come [SZIGET 2016]

SPOTIFY – The Devon, England trio Muse were really on the top for awhile. Then, somewhere along their career – just before 2009’s The Resistance – Muse frontman Matt Bellamy found about the novels of George Orwell.

 

Of course, Bellamy could have already been familiar with Orwell’s books; in fact, it’s very likely. But starting with The Resistance, especially its closing tripartite “symphony” called “Exogenesis”, Muse’s lyrical directive took on a tone similar to that of a Glenn Beck broadcast. In many if not most cases, Bellamy is singing about genuine problems, from the neoliberal global order (The Resistance‘s “United States of Eurasia”) to the instability of global markets (the title cut of 2012’s middling The 2nd Law).

Jack-of-all-trades

The concept is a loose one and not a requirement to enjoy the individual songs, many of which serve as reminders of why Muse has become such a popular band over the course of its first six albums. The group has successfully synthesized bits and pieces from the pop, rock, prog, and metal worlds — containing forebears like Queen and Van Halen — into comprehensible, tuneful mainstream rock. The trio has also masterfully translated its studio work to the arena stage, swinging for the fences with admirably shameless rock-operatic zeal.

One of the more important aspects of “Drones” is that it was coproduced by the band — multi-instrumentalists Bellamy, Dominic Howard, and Chris Wolstenholme — alongside the legendary, and somewhat reclusive, Robert John “Mutt” Lange, who has helmed blockbuster albums for AC/DC (including “Back in Black”), Def Leppard, the Cars, and ex-wife Shania Twain.

Over-the-top

However, Muse frames all of these problems in the most comically grandiloquent manner possible, what with the over-the-top Queen histrionics of “United States of Eurasia” and the regrettable dubstep wobble bass of “The 2nd Law”. There are no doubt issues with the new world order, but Muse’s take on the politics is more National Treasure than insightful critique. Because of this, it was predictable that Glenn Beck took a liking to Muse, even though they have dismissed the pundit as a “crazy rightwinger”.

It should come as no surprise, then, that Muse’s latest outing, Drones, sports an album cover that is the visual antithesis of the word “subtlety”. The band might as well have titled the LP The Government Is Controlling Our Minds and That Is a Bad Thing. Lyrically, Bellamy dives deep into the well of dystopian cliché, resurrecting the “you and I against the world” brand of romance (“Aftermath”), the R. Lee Ermey drill sergeant (lead single “Psycho”), and paranoia over brainwashing (“Defector”). These ideas undergird both The Resistance and The 2nd Law, but they are most blatantly expressed on Drones.

Brave New World

Anyone familiar with Literature 101 interpretations of Animal Farm and Brave New World will recognize Bellamy’s impassioned pleas for rebellion against an unjust order. Bellamy has likened his political ideology to that of famed leftist dissenter and linguist Noam Chomsky; unlike Chomsky, however, Muse is all style and no substance. Hell, on the ten-minute “The Globalist”, the band even rehashes the whistling trope that The Hunger Games popularized.

On the lyrical front, then, Drones is a regress; or, rather, the unfortunately logical conclusion of the technoparanoia that began with The Resistance. Even on classic tunes like Black Holes and Revelations’ (2006) desert prog number “Knights of Cydonia”, when Bellamy sings “No one’s gonna take me alive / The time has come to make things right / You and I must fight for our rights / You and I must fight to survive”, the “us vs. them” rebel mentality is generically expressed, and not tied to any specific political hand-wringing. “Knights of Cydonia” could function as a battle tune for any conflict, whereas the lyrics on Drones are most likely to be found on some budding high school anarchist’s notebook. (To the group’s credit, nothing here is as cringe-worthy as The 2nd Law‘s opening song, “Supremacy”: “Embedded spies / Brainwashing our children / To be mean.”)

Revolution!

Curiously, however, while Drones finds Muse peddling in Glenn Beck-worthy bumper sticker sentiments (“You can revolt!”, Bellamy chants on “Revolt”), musically this is the strongest and most consistent the group has been since Black Holes and Revelations. Yes, the Full Metal Jacket-isms of “Psycho” are as overbearing as its chorus of “Your ass belongs to me now” is dumb, but the song nonetheless boasts a wicked, bluesy riff, something that The 2nd Law failed to capitalize on.

That album’s greatest weakness, as I wrote in my review of it for PopMatters, is that its inclusion of dubstep and other electronic styles is nothing more than a fancy gimmick, one whose purpose is ostensibly to beef up Muse’s stadium rock sound, even though it in the end proves a nagging distraction. A track like The 2nd Law‘s lead single “Madness” doesn’t actually need the EDM wobble bass when its 12-bar blues structure and Bellamy’s lead vocal are its actual strong points.

Not my muse

Ultimately, though, anyone not keen on Muse’s brand of alternative rock, wherein prog’s instrumental wizardry and Queen’s operatic flourishes keep the intensity dial hovering just shy of 11, isn’t likely to be sold on Drones. The record’s moderate return to form will be most noticed by those who have tracked the band in the last decade, particularly after Absolution and Black Holes and Revelations.

Rather than opting to bring on new stylistic tricks in the hopes of making things sound fresh, as The 2nd Law so erroneously did, Drones gives the world the Muse that broke big in the mid ‘00s; in other words, the Muse that’s most fun to listen to. Unfortunately, this record also makes it plain that these guys still have quite a bit to work on; as long as Bellamy continues to spout out conspiracy theory taglines, it won’t matter how cool the riffs are or how appealing his classically trained voice sounds.

For now, Drones can be chalked up as one step forward, one step back for this British trio. If Muse is able to find a way to express its political concerns in a manner that doesn’t bash the listener over the head, they might just find a way to get both feet headed in the same direction.

 -PS4Pro Team-

Muse: Drones

Music - 7.1
Lyrics - 5.8
Style - 6.5
Innovation - 5.4
Trend - 6.3

6.2

OKAY

For their seventh album, the British sci-fi rockers teamed up with Mutt Lange, who’s produced albums by AC/DC and Maroon 5. You won’t find any of the visceral thump or glossy sheen of those bands here. There are snatches of salvation (the breathless chug “Revolt”), but every time Drones aims for dystopian profundity, it hits Styx-level goofiness.

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One comment

  1. Stephen Yosh says:

    Poor Muse. I admire their courage, but anybody who defies the Liberal Establishment quickly drops into anonymity. I like them, but this is career suicide (unfortunately). George Soros will make certain that their airplay is minimized and the machine that they rail against in this new effort will swallow them whole.

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