Ceremony | Zoo

Matador (2012)
By GARRETT MARTIN  |  March 13, 2012
3.0 3.0 Stars

Ceremony

Wire's Chairs Missing might very well be the best rock album of all time. It's definitely one of the most influential, foreshadowing a half-dozen or so subgenres of indie rock in just under an hour. When critics say that Zoo, the new album from the all-grown-up ex-hardcore band Ceremony, sounds like Wire, they're probably talking about the Wire of 1978, and particularly songs like "Sand in My Joints" and "Too Late," which unite noise, repetition, and punk energy in artistic bursts of conceptual attitude. Ceremony aren't as intellectual or dryly hilarious as Wire and don't attempt a comparable stylistic variety, but the raucous Zoo is a fine tribute to Wire's heavier side, alternating between powerful, lumbering riffs and manic splatters of guitar noise. The acerbic lyrics to "Ordinary People" and "Community Service" might be a little too safe or obvious, like a Country Teasers song that's pulling its punches, but it's unusual for something so condescending and sarcastic to get released on a major indie-rock label these days. There's been a shortage of intentional assholes in indie rock lately, and Ceremony are absolutely willing to fill that gap.
Related: John K. Samson | Provincial, Dr. Dog is the drug, Lissy Trullie | Lissy Trullie, More more >
  Topics: CD Reviews , Community service, rock, ZOO,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY GARRETT MARTIN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   YO LA TENGO | FADE  |  January 17, 2013
    Fade starts with James McNew and Ira Kaplan harmonizing on the line "sometimes the good things fade."
  •   ALLO DARLIN' | EUROPE  |  April 10, 2012
    It's good to hear a band grow. Like Allo Darlin's first effort, Europe is full of catchy pop songs, and Elizabeth Morris's vocals are still heart-tuggingly direct and intimate.
  •   CEREMONY | ZOO  |  March 13, 2012
    Ceremony aren't as intellectual or dryly hilarious as Wire and don't attempt a comparable stylistic variety, but the raucous Zoo is a fine tribute to Wire's heavier side, alternating between powerful, lumbering riffs and manic splatters of guitar noise.
  •   THE MAGNETIC FIELDS | LOVE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA  |  February 28, 2012
    The Magnetic Fields' last three albums all eschewed the synthesizers that typified their sound in the '90s, but Fields main man Stephin Merritt makes up for it on Love at the Bottom of the Sea, where he deploys at least 10 albums' worth of synths in a brisk 35 minutes.
  •   GUIDED BY VOICES | LET'S GO EAT THE FACTORY  |  January 11, 2012
    The GBV name on Let's Go Eat the Factory' s label indicates two things to those fans: this is the first record to feature the "classic" Bee Thousand/Alien Lanes line-up since 1996, and this is the first Pollard album to deserve the GBV moniker since the break-up.

 See all articles by: GARRETT MARTIN