Monday 8 April 2013

The Knife - Shaking the Habitual

Everyone’s been describing this, the first brand new album from The Knife since 2006’s darkly fantastic Silent Shout, as ‘difficult listening’ – like it’s an album that’s dense with thought and feeling, built with meticulous ingenuity and, when cryptically decoded, speaks volumes about this, that or the other. I’m not so sure about this myself. While the Swedish soul-serenaders have made a point of running, terrified, from the evil giant of electropop conventionality, presenting here an album that’s about twice the length of their previous effort, I find myself wondering if this was an ambitious stumble in the right direction. It’s not immediately clear exactly how Shaking the Habitual is the mysterious family duo re-shaping preconceptions or breaking any real boundaries, as has been flaunted by many, except maybe the boundary of human patience.

Yeah, as excited as I was for this album, the consensus going around that there was going to be a strongly political heft to it made me sceptical. I love The Knife as much as anyone, but mainly for their strange and sinister synthpop, where concrete and tangible ideas seem to get lost in the fog of the catchy dance rhythms and menacing atmospherics, and while I appreciate the gender-bending aspects to their image and sound and Karin Dreijer Andersson’s trans-androgynous pitch-shifting, I’m not sure that Shaking the Habitual is the intellectual statement on the group’s political views that I think they might have intended. And if it is, it’s buried so deep under a mound of byzantine inaccessibility that I’m perfectly comfortable with being quite unable to ‘get it’. What I was expecting from this album wasn’t what it would say to my brain but what it would say to my ears – and on a purely sonic level, it’s a mixed bag, shifting between sounding frantically urgent and solemnly doom-laden, pausing occasionally (but not always briefly) for some ambient interludes, all the while balancing between exciting and tedious.

There’s a theme of tension running through all the tracks on this album; the songs are brimming with portent, and frequently sail off into some enjoyably dark territory. Because that’s what I really enjoy about The Knife – revelling in their world of weird foreboding, and having a little internal souldance at the same time. The more danceable highlights include the awesomely frantic ‘Full of Fire’ – nine minutes of industrially-driven madness – and several tracks make a show of the duo’s love for the percussive, like the woodblock jungle of ‘A Tooth for an Eye’ and the tribal drumming of ‘Without You My Life Would Be Boring’. But it’s the more oppressively sinister parts of the album that really stick a skewer into your heart. ‘Wrap Your Arms Around Me’ is a track scarred with vulnerability, a piece groaning with sexual malignance. But probably the most delectably bleak corner of Shaking the Habitual can be found in ‘A Cherry on Top’, which is a masterfully crafted vacuum of foreboding. It has that gothic-insanity feel, like spending a night alone in a madhouse. It’s just that sort of pantomime craziness that The Knife can pull off spectacularly, not least because of Andersson’s shape-shifting, intensely disquieting moan of a voice is one of the duo’s most powerful assets.

So, there’s a lot of good here, sure. I like the earthy clunk and squeaky siren calls over ‘Raging Lung’, a song that’s like travelling on a rusty tug over a misty ocean – I love the spongy trumpet sound and the heave of the background’s metallic bass snores. I like the introduction of other vocalists on ‘Stay Out Here’, the album’s most conventionally house-y song, which I think really adds to its unsettling power. All of this is well and good. But that’s not to say that this is a good ‘album’. Part of the problem is that Shaking the Habitual is astonishingly long – way, way, way overlong, which I think was a significant lapse of judgement on The Knife’s part – this is not an album that should’ve been an hour and a half in length, there’s just simply not enough material here to justify it. Especially considering that most of the ‘material’ I’m talking about might not even be considered music. The album has long, ponderous stretches of ambient noise and sound – two of the tracks here, ‘Crake’ and ‘Oryx’, are short spurts of rubbish that seem to exist for no other reason than their titles reference Margaret Atwood, thereby proving The Knife’s intellectual credibility to absolutely no-one. ‘Old Dreams Waiting to be Realized’ is probably the track you’d first notice as clocking in at nineteen minutes, and consisting entirely of reasonably quiet and brain-calcifyingly boring sounds of not much in particular. This, coupled with the needless and ineffective ‘Fracking Fluid Injection’ – ten-ish minutes of irritatingly repetitive squeaking that goes nowhere – means that at least half an hour of the album’s running time should’ve been snipped and shelved and The Knife should admit defeat and concede that these wanderings of madness stymie the album’s flow to a treacle-fast sludge.

But even with these tedious missteps of arty nonsense gone, the album remains pretty ineffectively paced, with even the best songs sometimes outstaying their welcome and becoming a little bit tiring, even if the momentum behind the tracks seemed so initially promising. The Knife are still cultivating some pretty powerful sounds here. It’s definitely not as bad as my frustration may have made it out to be, and when you skip all the boring bits, which are nicely organised into just one or two tracks, it’s a real delight of pained terror and urgent post-pop fun. But in many ways, the piece as an actual album is a failure, in that it’s impossible to make heads or tails of the socio-political polemic that is apparently somewhere to be found within it, and in that to listen to it all in one go is one very long, very unfulfilling act of hardship bordering on self-abuse. Saying that, however, I do recommend that you give it a listen, as there’s goodness to be found within its depths, and The Knife may sometimes stagger over to the wrong side of ‘arty’, but their unique talents are still inspiring and often riveting. If you like the weird shit then you’ll definitely be in luck here.


The Knife - 'Full of Fire'