Paul Weller: Sonik Kicks
Paul Weller
Sonik Kicks
(Yep Roc Records)
There are two Paul Weller’s. The good Paul recorded classic solo albums like his self- titled debut, Stanley Road, and Heavy Soul, which wrapped Weller’s smooth production around rock, R & B, jazz and techno influences. Weller’s sonic demarcation line is 2004’s Studio 150, a compelling collection of unlikely and little-known covers. The bad Paul surfaced with 2005’s As Is Now, which emphasized Weller’s ragged vocals and punk posturing that typified his first band, the Jam.
Weller’s eleventh solo effort, Sonik Kicks, combines good Paul with his adventuresome, bad self. In the songs that don’t work, (mostly the ones done at break-neck speed), Weller tries too hard to be relevant and edgy, resorting to too many techno tricks.
Sonik Kicks gets off to a distressingly distorted start with “Green” on which Weller raps in a Cockney accent against an accompaniment that mind-melds Kraftwerk on speed with the leaden bashing of U2. Sonic continues to sink with “Kling I Klang,” which sports ludicrous lyrics that veer dangerously close to Saturday Night Live’s Sweeney Sisters belting out “The Trolley Song” (“Clang clang went the trolley!”). “Drifters,” a kitchen sink assault of phased vocals, ominous bass lines and crashing drums is the most disorganized mess Weller’s ever done, and there’s no legitimate reason to record the thirteen seconds of sonic disturbance titled “Twilight.”
Fortunately the rest of Sonik Kicks is equal to Weller’s finer efforts. “By the Waters” is a serene ballad with soft acoustic guitar and florid strings; the equally unplugged “Devotion” finds Weller in such a casual 60’s frame of mind that he whistles his way through the outro. His love for 60’s R & B takes center stage in “That Dangerous Age” in which an overdubbed Weller serves as his own version of the Supremes (“Shoo-oop! She’s at that dangerous age!”).
With its karate-chop beat, watery Hammond and dominant bass, “Study in Blue” marries R & B with ska and pulls off an effective fade out/fade in, not once, but twice. Weller sings in an appropriately subdued tone in “Paper Chase,” mixing Beatle-esque psychedelia with interludes from Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir.”
Known affectionately as “the Modfather” in his native England, Weller’s releases are practically guaranteed #1 status in the U.K. (including Sonik Kicks). Weller’s less well-known in the U.S., but his latest collection should kick his popularity up a notch or two.