A true resistance movement, in the classical sense, does more than just overturn the status quo. A truly influential resistance is one that stands for something greater, that meets traditional wisdom with fierce internal power and clashes with the establishment in such a meaningful way that, in the event of its failure, future generations can still look to their example for strength. If a resistance is truly important, it will ring throughout history and impact even those who oppose it simply through the strength of its ideals.
Whatever resistance Muse is attempting to mount with their new album will probably be forgotten before the last song is finished playing.
Muse has always been a fairly well-respected band for its musical ability and for singer Matthew Bellamy's stirring, if divisive, voice. All the musical talent in the world can't make up for derivative songwriting. The band's "Guitar Hero"-powered hit single, "Knights of Cydonia" (from "Black Holes and Revelations") was basically a cowboy's version of "Bohemian Rhapsody."
Unfortunately for the listener, this trend of style biting has continued with surprising vigor. The cheese-laden, piano-ballad-to-hard-rock jam "United States of Eurasia (+Collateral Damage)" should have Queen guitarist Brian May considering litigation. The guitar solo in the equally grandiose "Guiding Light" even has May's classic guitar sound, and bears such a close resemblance to his work it made me check the liner notes to see if it had been sampled from "A Night At The Opera."
Everything about "The Resistance" is big, big, big, with no thought to what it's really all for. Clearly, Bellamy is trying to make a point or a million points at once, but they're so vapidly basic, one would have to wonder if he simply watched John Carpenter's "They Live" and decided that would be enough information to write his lyrics around.
The lyrics are beyond stupid. The most interesting line on the whole album comes on "Unnatural Selection: "Counterbalance is commotion/We're not droplets in the ocean." Pretty good. If only there was one more phrase on the entire album that was evocative in any way.
Just try to wrap your brain around the sheer poetry of their lead-off single "Uprising": "Rise up and take the power back/It's time the fat cats had a heart attack/Their time's coming to an end/It's time to rise up and watch our flag ascend."
On every song, Bellamy yells about wanting truth and fighting back against the lies that "they" are feeding us. He belts ad nauseam about power and right and wrong and victory. But, aside from being alarmist nonsense, his blathering results in absolutely nothing. There are no solutions offered other than "rising up," whatever it is he thinks that means.
Basically, it's all problems, no solutions.
Even if you can ignore the nonsense lyrics, the music is hardly inspired or original. After listening through the album several times, I still can't tell which song is which unless I'm looking at the track listing. And it's not like Muse isn't trying. If anything, they're trying too hard. The production value of each song is so cavernously huge there is no gravity; if music traveled in the vacuum of space, it would sound like "The Resistance," and everything would be too huge to be discernable.
What makes "The Resistance" so unpalatable is not simply its awful wordplay and bloated song structures, but the pretentiousness that has gone into its every detail. Muse clearly believes they've made something Earth-shattering, and every gluttonous minute of music feels more like three men paying homage to their own greatness rather than a band simply making a good sound.
Rock bands that aspire to something more can be great. But rock bands that aspire to be more and fail simply come off looking foolish, especially when they try to pass themselves off as leaders of some great movement.
And in the end, that's what it's all about. Muse is trying to lead some form of revolution, to affect some sort of musical or political transformation. But to anyone who's actually paying attention, it sounds like what Muse is resisting most strongly isn't the voice of power, but rather the voice of reason.
Christian Hagen is a Reporter staff writer





Be the first to comment on this article!