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enter shikari take to the skies

Enter Shikari: Take To The Skies

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by Mike Diver

It begins with a shrill “SHIT!” and a choir of screams, but the thrill doesn’t last: like riding even the most knuckle-whitening of rollercoasters, Enter Shikari’s much-anticipated debut album reveals itself as a wholly one-dimensional listen as early as the third or fourth song, the equivalent of the third or fourth time around said stomach-turning sequence of twisters, given that the structural schematics of each of these 17 tracks are depressingly formulaic.

The Enter Shikari songwriting rule book extends to three essential tick ‘em off points: one, play your guitars fast and crunchy; two, intersperse your singing with throat-shredding growls a la all those post-hardcore sound-alike acts of however many years ago; and three, chuck a load of cheap synthesizer beats over the top of everything under the mistaken impression that you’re turning a paint-by-numbers piece into a priceless Jackson Pollock. If you’ve heard either download-only single ‘Mothership’ or the recently released ‘Anything Can Happen In The Next Half Hour’ (reworked from the band’s much-pimped demo of 2004 – DiS has a couple of copies and is taking offers), then you’ve heard everything this album has to offer.

Although the album’s sleeve implies there are 17 songs here, six of them are simple electronic interludes/intros/outros; of the verse-chorus-verse offerings, ‘Labyrinth’ is a cheesy Euro-pop backing track shafted by the most elementary of amplified six-string workouts, complemented of course by sweet ‘n’ sour vocals (think Busted collaborating with Poison The Well); ‘Return To Energiser’ begins charmingly chaotically but ultimately slips into the band’s all-too-obvious comfort zone once the keys make their presence known; and ‘OK, Time For Time B’, the album’s almost-closer, is the soundtrack from Turbo Outrun (or some other car driving game of old – DiS’s memory is a little misty these days) mangled by a Funeral For A Friend covers band. These are the highlights, if you choose to classify them as such.

There’s a lyrical apology proffered the dissatisfied listener’s way on the aforementioned final song proper: “We’ve tried to communicate, but we’ve got no patience”. Perhaps if Enter Shikari had taken their time a little with this D.I.Y. release – you’d have thought, without a label calling them at the studio five times a week, they’d have worked at their own pace and without too much pressure to rush-release this LP – they’d have produced a debut worthy of their current profile, a profile founded upon their alleged rewriting of the rock rule book in the wake of crossover success for Klaxons and their dance-rock associates. But they’ve failed to even produce a good album, let alone one that sets a precedent for would-be peers to aim for. Refused, Botch, The Rise: many, many bands spliced hardcore with electronic beats before Enter Shikari, all with greater success, albeit not success of a commercial nature.

One can only hope that Take To The Skies acts as a bridge record for its teenage audience and ultimately introduces inquisitive ears to Enter Shikari’s more-competent, more-satisfying forefathers. While the four-piece’s decision to stay independent for their debut long-player is worthy of a hearty back-slap, no positives can be penned regarding their woeful on-record ostracising of credibility. Live, before a pit full of laser-waving mini-moshers, these songs might make sense; on a cold compact disc they’re merely poorly realised reinterpretations of the work of historical heavyweights unworthy of the slightest attention from anyone who understands the definition of discerning.

  • Enter Shikari 4 / 10

Have only heard

about 3 songs of theirs but each one makes me want to be sick out my arse.


One more lazily constructed

Coat-of-Arms-style album cover and I'm pressing the button.


I just wish they

would go away.


.

might post this on their forum...


.

cause i'm petit like that


*

*petty


OH NOES!!! MYSPACE KIDS WILL KILLDiS FOR THIS!!111111 SO STFU11

Great review. im getting sick of seeing other zines and mags give it such glowing reviews. dogshit music


Great Review.

Hit the nail on the head. Absolute twat.


Linkin Park

...but British and slightly less po-faced. Thanks guys.


yeah

i noticed this yesterday. i cant actualy see a real a difference between them and linkin park.

its just a slightly different genre they are shitting on.


I have never heard

any of their music.

and from this review I am not gonna.


spot

on M Diver - they're so boring and talentless


Easier said then done

I became contaminated the other day by the wretched sound of Enter Shakiri! Curses!
They do sound like all the synth parts are presets from dance ejay though.


can we please have Senser back now

they were doing the rock, rap, techno, rave thing years ago, were really good live, wrote an amazing album in Stacked Up, and genuinely imploded under their own weight of influences.

by the way using Refused as an example is always bad, the electronic stuff on "shape of punk to come" was pretty much all post-production which the band had little to do with. far better examples would be Ministry or NIN who genuinely combined a whole bunch of stuff together rather then patching one influence onto another.


industrial

is far too much of a closed, self-absorbed musical world to serve as an effective example of musical crossover.

The Rise (who were, let's be honest, a bit dull) make a pretty good comparison.


the thing about industrial

is that when it was kinda up and running in it's prime from the early 80's to the early 90's it basically took what postpunk/goth had started and really married it to the detroit techno aesthetic, while writing songs which sounded in equal parts thrash metal, early cure, juan atkins and europop. i think we kinda forget how completely groundbreaking (and in most cases hated) as a genre (if you can call it that) it was because everything it did is now considered the norm. most importantly without it you would never have had the prodigy making the second album they did and pushing things just that bit further then anyone else had done (and probably has done since).


the thing about industrial

is that when it was kinda up and running in it's prime from the early 80's to the early 90's it basically took what postpunk/goth had started and really married it to the detroit techno aesthetic, while writing songs which sounded in equal parts thrash metal, early cure, juan atkins and europop. i think we kinda forget how completely groundbreaking (and in most cases hated) as a genre (if you can call it that) it was because everything it did is now considered the norm. most importantly without it you would never have had the prodigy making the second album they did and pushing things just that bit further then anyone else had done (and probably has done since).


F'ing bluddy Hell

after an inspiring first single we now have an LP full of mess (like my bed room)but for those interludes that breaks up the hilarity of this dreadful record I would afforded them a 2 out of 10 but instead a rather generous and reluctant 3 out 10 from me for the comedy factor.


with this review

diver is now returned to the status of 'absolute genius'(in my eyes anyway) .. after the klaxons 9 destroyed my opinion of him


ouch

oh right
i actually meant bloc party.. slight slip of the tongue/mind there


Why do this band...

...exist? John Peel would turn in his grave


worst review ever.

all you guys have got to remember
its ONE guys opinion, and tbh

its wrong.

even if you don't like Shikari, they tour all the time.

buy a ticket.

and watch them.

there possibly the most energetic band in the UK, and some awesome songs should give them recognition there not getting.


energy, maybe

but tunes? no.


...

I've heard this album (although it applies more to the band) reviewed in a two-word manner ala Spinal Tap on The Fly Magazine 'Joe's Room' podcast by Noddy (a comic legend) as: "Abortion Specialists". In the age of Anti-Bush that may seem like a good thing but I doubt they'll be using this to soundtrack any antinatal classes.


well...

they play tight live and they do have some energy but its really hard to see past the bad music.


Right on, Mike!

Enter Shitari (see what I did there?) are bloody awful. After not listening to this album, I wanna do a curry trotter shite, WKD vodka piss and puke in my pyjamas. Better, and more colour than one of their gigs.

"These are the highlights, if you choose to clarify them as such." Ha ha haa, nice one!

Mike Diver, your review is so true. You remind me of Jon Gaunt, because he always hits the nail on the head. Like you did in this review. *Thumbs-up*

Also, a point of interest 'ere. I read in a review that the beginning bit in "Return to Energiser" was inspired by The Dillinger Escape Plan. Enter Shitari don't know how to lie.





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