
Regardless of what I am about to say in this review, I have always found Muse hard to listen to their studio work. However, they are beyond amazing live. I thoroughly enjoy their spectacular headline shows at festivals. I saw one particular performance from the current “Will of the People” tour, complete with lasers, great visuals, hypnotic guitars, Matt’s futuristic jacket and a robotic hand where he somehow manages to know the correct swiggles to draw on the touchpad of the glove to form the melody.
However, despite their failure to create their live shows in the studio, what cannot be ignored is their lyrics and subjects—the subjects ranging from anti-establishment, pro-freedom, and sex. Not many people talk about the drummer Dominic Howard, but he more than compliments Chris Wolstenholme’s bass wizardry and Matt Bellamy’s versatile vocals that also sometimes ape the guitar. The Devonshire trio have been going since 1994 and released their debut “Showbiz” in 1999. However, it wasn’t until 2001 and their second record, “Origin of Symmetry”, that the band started to get noticed, with ‘Plug in Baby’ charting just outside the top 10. Their biggest success chart-wise is ‘Supermassive Black Hole’, where Chris does the whispered chorus. They are yet to get a number one, but that isn’t a surprise when you consider they are more of a live band.
Amazingly, “Will of the People” is their ninth studio album and their most politically charged to date. This could well be told from Matt’s perspective, but it is a worldview. We are sick of the society we currently reside in and grow angrier with the establishment.
The opening track is the title track, which acts as a call to arms to start a revolution against the establishment. I first heard this as an introduction song on their current tour. They may now perform it rather than the studio version playing before they go onstage. The song features a baying crowd over AC/DC-esque guitars with Matt with venom in his vocals that he will lead the revolution and overthrow the establishment, which is quite apt during the current climate. It certainly got my attention from the off, at least.
The leading single is ‘Compliance’, which I had heard during this particular concert I watched on YouTube, and I have to say, I loved the concept behind it and the thought-provoking lyrics. However, this time, Matt does it from the oppressor’s perspective. It is also a condescending dig at the establishment.
One thing I loved about the album is this revolutionist vs oppressor topic over futuristic melodies, with Matt muting the chords with his palm; synths and elements are taken from the Weeknd. There is even room for them, once again, to pay tribute to Queen with ‘Liberation’. What do I mean? It just sounds like Queen from the instrumentation to Matt’s vocals. This is Another song told from the perspective of the people determined to revolt.
However, there is a turn of events on ‘Ghosts(How Can I Move on)’, which, at first listen, I thought had Chris Martin (Coldplay) on vocals. The song screams all things Coldplay. The disappointments come on ‘Kill or be Killed’ and ‘Won’t Stand Down’. Although the songs have great titles, they sound more like a messy breakup rather than fighting for one’s freedom from the establishment.
Muse, like several others, are pretty adept at recycling their songs. Although they have been written and recorded over the past year, they still sound familiar, as seen in ‘Won’t Stand Down’, which sounds similar to ‘Supermassive Black Hole’. ‘Verona’ reminded me more of U2, particularly Edge’s riffs. Going back to Muse recycling, ‘Euphoria’ sounds like ‘Time is Running out’ vs Donna Summer’s ‘I Feel Love’.
My standout is the closer ‘We are Fucking Fucked’. The lyrics are delicious and aptly mimic the tone of what we all feel. We are fucking fucked, and the lyrics expressed that with mentions of world war, et cetera. It also sounds a bit like ‘Knights of Cydonia’, albeit there is no call-to-arms, but rather a pessimistic view of not being capable of sorting out this shitstorm we are all in. What a way and a statement to end the album.
However, I found the record quite disjointed and a mishmash of Muse’s past work slightly reimagined. The messages are also contradictory because Matt is asking for a revolution, yet then is rather pessimistic, moaning and unwilling to do anything. Again, Muse has made an album that is only for the live arena. As I said, their studio work does not ape the effort put in when they perform live.
Song recommendations: ‘We Are Fucking Fucked’, ‘Will of the People’, ‘Compliance’
6/10
