Because no one remotely asked for it...
There's been a lot of positive comments about this album from avid fans and avid critics who are closet BSP fans - "at ease with themselves", "haunting", a "journey", etc. I've personally had a hell of a time getting my head wrapped around Machineries of Joy. It most certainly does not bear listening to intently in front of a computer. I tried that three times, and that only led to a furtive but deep worry about the album. I've now had a full and proper fourth listen...properly done on good headphones while walking in the woods. It's helped a lot.
Structurally, there's similarity with Open Season, their most melodic album, but I think the similarities end there. It's thematically very different, not just from OS but from Decline through Do You Like Rock Music. While those seemed often metaphorical and celebratory of nature and things, this seems more directly experiential - it's the BSP folks being inside of these subjects rather just authors of them. In that context, it feels like their most personal album. Similar to Vahhalla Dancehall, I also think it's BSP being very willful - this feels exactly like what they wanted it to be, not that I actually know that. However, rather than the "fuck em" vibe I got from VD, MoJ feels very honest. Not obstinate but completely ingenuous.
One puzzling thing is that seems it can work on two totally different levels - good party and almost dance songs (!) but also good walk-in-the-woods songs. To the journey aspect of it, that too feels very different from earlier albums. Honestly, the vibe I get from these songs isn't that of a physical journey but of a psychedelic drug trip, sometimes manic and frenetic, other times chilled and reflective, with brooding lulls and relevatory highs. It's not always a "true adventure" out in nature, but sometimes a walk through a haunted wood. Now, that could just be my listening setting talking. I don't know how to rate the album overall yet. It feels like a good repeated listen but maybe not in all settings. I would listen to the first three albums anytime, anywhere. Not this. In that sense maybe it's a 7/10 for me. To a non-fan, I can't seeing it getting much attention at all. They may be so at ease with their quirky selves that others will be like "WTF?" A 6/10 in that context?
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Individual song ratings (and a small pic of where I actually was at the time):
1. Machineries of Joy - 9 - I don't care what the band say about tossing out anything that sounded like old BSP, this is classic majestic BSP and a fitting start to the "trip".
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-sKPJH3M/0/M/12-M.jpg">
2. K Hole - 7 - didn't like it at all until my 4th listen; a druggy, frenetic trip indeed.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-PGpSmhC/0/M/9-M.jpg">
3. Hail Holy Queen - 7 - this is that reflective comedown bit post-K Hole; good fit.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-GmpXB4f/0/M/10-M.jpg">
4. Loving Animals - 7 - this is really haunting, and the ending bits are kinda scary alone in the woods; it's almost post-apocalyptic in parts.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-SKZ2VZb/0/M/8-M.jpg">
5. What You Need the Most - 8 - good positive vibes; needed post-Animals.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-Gs3gxdJ/0/M/7-M.jpg">
6. Monsters of Sunderland - 4 - horns feel a little too ham-fisted; I wasn't quite ready to go frenetic again; when 6-piece BSP are inferior to old 4-piece BSP.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-8Cqm2MJ/0/M/6-M.jpg">
7. Spring Has Sprung - 7 - most-improved with listening; it almost starts on the wrong note for Hamilton's voice but gets better.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-DGVqzxm/0/M/4-M.jpg">
8. Radio Goddard - 9 - this bit's glorious; it's like that point well into a "trip" where you're getting comfortable with the mojo of it and just letting it wash over you.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-dfKHLxG/0/M/5-M.jpg">
9. A Light Above Descending - 7 - almost a continuation of Goddard; little more upbeat; enjoyable but not brilliant.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-RrdCgQP/0/M/3-M.jpg">
10. When a Warm Wind Blows - 2 - wow, I guess I don't get this song; it's a total downer for me, almost like it's pulling me back into earlier parts of the album rather than finishing it off properly; the song feels unfinished, so the album feels unfinished as well.
<img src="http://blir.smugmug.com/Nature/Machineries-of-Joy/i-Kpg8J2g/0/M/1-M.jpg">