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Mr. Beast

Mogwai

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Album Review

Possibly the most accessible yet sophisticated album Mogwai has released, Mr. Beast strips away most of the electronic embellishment of their recent work in favor of a back-to-basics sound that returns to and expands on the approach they pioneered on Young Team. Mr. Beast is also a surprisingly spontaneous-sounding album — in the best possible sense, its freshness makes it feel like a recorded practice session and also helps give relatively delicate pieces like "Team Handed" the same amount of impact that heavy, searing tracks like the closer, "We're No Here," have. Interestingly, more of Mr. Beast tends toward the former kind of song than the latter; "Friend of the Night," "Emergency Trap," and the glorious, slow-burning album opener, "Auto-Rock," give the album an unusually refined, even elegant feel that is underscored by the prominent use of piano and lap steel in the arrangements. On songs like "Acid Food" and the magnificent "I Chose Horses" — which features cavernously deep bass and spoken word vocals by Tetsuya Fukagawa from the Japanese hardcore band Envy — Mr. Beast feels downright pastoral. However, Mogwai doesn't give up their heavy side entirely, as the aforementioned "We're No Here" and "Glasgow Mega-Snake" show; any song that has either "mega" or "snake" in the title should rock, and this one does, kicking off with a claustrophobic snarl of guitars that makes this one of the most intense pieces Mogwai has ever recorded. Mr. Beast manages to be immediate without sounding dumbed-down..

Customer Reviews

For the song titles alone, I salute you.

Yes. This is a good album. Yes. it is by Mogwai. Yes. Mogwai are Scottish. The only thing bad about it is the last track, We're No here (Live from the ICA). If this is the Institute (makes rude gesture with right hand) of Contemporary Arts in London, it is just wrong. Anyone who's ever visited will know it has the worst bar staff in London.

Return To Form

I am a big Mogwai fan and but concerned that they seemed a bit static over recent albums. This however is top drawer and moves the sound of mogwai to a new level. A triumphant return.

Continuing on, if not surpassing

I thought this album was slightly weaker than Happy Songs.... but nonetheless has some crackers on it. Friend of the Night is probably the best thing they've ever done, and glasgow mega snake sounds positively ferocious, especially live. Its great to see Scottish experimental guitar music continuing to do well, with mogwai leading the way and local acts like Beaches of the Proud and Commander Keen following in their footsteps

Biography

Formed: 1996 in Glasgow, Scotland

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

The cosmic post-rock band Mogwai were formed in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1996 by guitarist/vocalist Stuart Braithwaite, guitarist Dominic Aitchison, and drummer Martin Bulloch, longtime friends with the goal of creating "serious guitar music." Toward that end they added another guitarist, John Cummings, before debuting in March 1996 with the single "Tuner," a rarity in the Mogwai discography for its prominent vocals; the follow-up, a split single with Dweeb titled "Angels vs. Aliens," landed in the...
Full bio

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