Coral Fang – Paul Hanson

Coral Fang
Sire Records, 2003
Reviewed by Paul Hanson
Published on Feb 26, 2004

What I would want for the Distillers is to show up on a tour
with them as a supporting act. I think a blistering 30-45 minute
set would make the headliners play balls-out every night. The
Distillers have an air about them that makes you fear that you have
to follow their obnoxious vocalist/guitarist Brody Dalle and whip
the crowd into even more excitement in order for the crowd to
appreciate your hard work. It would not be an easy task, not to
mention all the controversey that surrounds the Distillers. The
naked crucified female on the cover of
Coral Fang, the graphic artwork within the CD booklet, the
Parental Advisory sticker . . . the screaming vocals of the band’s
female singer/guitarist, the press kit that stated the band hates
each other . . . wasn’t this band called “Hole” in the 90s?

The comparison may be natural, but I can’t say it’s really fair,
nor is it one upon I will base this review. Instead, it’s important
to realize that guitarist/vocalist Brody Dalle is the forefront of
this band. This 11-track release focuses on the type of no-frills
alternative rock/punk that was prevalent when simpler times allowed
bands to focus on a riff and hammer the crap out of it until a song
was formed. No guitar solos or individual showcase spots for the
band members to shine or step up and make a single musician the
focus of the band. This works to the band’s advantage because it
makes Dalle’s aggressive vocal delivery the forefront of the band’s
attack.

The uptempo songs, when Dalle is not wallowing in despair, but
using her angst to propel the band work best. “The Hunger” and
“Hall of Mirrors” stand out as being the band’s focal points. The
melody is not overly complex and would translate to a live setting
easily.

The Distillers strike me as the type of band that would thrive
on playing 5 out of 7 nights on a tour across the states, playing
to sweaty, drunkards, who just want to dance or bob their heads to
the beat. The lyrics and music are especially memorable. After
listening to this release six times, I still can’t recite the
lyrics without having the CD booklet in front of me, yet with each
listen, I catch more and more of the intricacy of this band.

Perhaps the most over-stated track about the band’s music is the
12 minute plus opus and final track “Death Sex.” The song starts
out as an aggressive punk track before collapsing into distortion
and screams from Dalle. It sounds like the song was recorded live,
with all the distortion and miscellaneous drum hits before the band
returns to the fast beat and then closes the song out to waves of
distortion and cymbals and drums.

Rating: B

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