Album Review: Johnny Marr - The Messenger


Having helped define The Smiths and bolster the sound of Modest Mouse, legendary English guitarist Johnny Marr is finally releasing his first solo album. On The Messenger, a Britpoppy-garage-rocking-impossibly-cool debut, the 49 year old grooves with defiant youthfulness as he displays talents honed to perfection during decades of stellar work. The album provides Marr with the focus he deserves and in turn Marr provides listeners with a fun collection of songs as solid and straightforward as any artist could hope to release.

Everything The Messenger delivers is unapologetically familiar. Lovers of late seventies to mid-eighties New Wave or bands like The Stone Roses, Echo & the Bunnymen, The Cure, Simple Minds, INXS, and The Cult will find plenty to adore. The record’s derivative ear candy, as addictive as it is unoriginal, is nostalgically evocative of just-plain-good music from eras and scenes Marr contributed to. The Messenger finds a great instrumentalist doing what he has always done, adding slick personal vocals into the mix for extra effect.

Though Marr’s voice is more relaxed and less rich than his former bandmate, Morrissey, it contains its own streetwise assurance. The lyrics on The Messenger are intelligently composed, largely concerned with communication breakdown, even if they are not as strange and urgent as those found on a Smiths album. The songs themselves, however, often thrust forward in sensual lunges with an unrestrained vivacity The Smiths never had much interest in, topping the classic band in terms of sheer energy level.

On “Word Starts Attack,” Marr sings, “All the things that the new are promised has made things that are not for us.” If this is a statement on popular trends in the music industry, The Messenger itself may be an ideal antidote for those seeking an escape from the Top 40. It is not a Smiths record. It is not high art. But it does return rock n’ roll to a much much better place.

Grade: B+




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