Album Reviews

Garbage: Strange Little Birds

garbage-strange-little-birds-album-new

Garbage
Strange Little Birds
(STUNVOLUME)
Rating: 3.5ย out of 5 stars

Three years in the making and four since 2012โ€™s Not Your Kind of People (the debut on the groupโ€™s own STUNVOLUME imprint), Garbage returns with their sixth and arguably rawest release. Not as much a regression as a more mature shaping of the foursomeโ€™s synth/guitar laced tunes (the haunting โ€œTeaching Little Fingers to Playโ€ features singer Shirley Manson singing โ€œIโ€™m a big girl nowโ€ฆIโ€™m all grown upโ€), Strange Little Birds keeps the instrumentation stripped down if not always stark and the production at its most minimal.

There are still a few harder edged tracks such as โ€œBlackoutโ€ and โ€œSo We Can Stay Aliveโ€ to satiate the rockers. But the disc tilts more to darker shaded ballads like the spare, beat driven โ€œIf I Lost Youโ€ and the percussive โ€œMagnetizedโ€ that maintain the traditional Garbage sound, yet move into more reflective territory. While the band have never been known for an upbeat lyrical bent, these songs are particularly gloomy, forbidding and leave little doubt that Garbage feels most comfortable on the dark end of their street. โ€œWeโ€™re on the outside always looking in,โ€ sings Manson in her typically alluring voice that always seems to be just a note away from exploding into vitriolic anger, yet never does. Itโ€™s that balance of hard beats and purring, cat-like singing best exemplified in the careening, creepy/beautiful tones of โ€œIf I Lost Youโ€ that has generally created the unspoken tension in Garbageโ€™s music and is in full display on this album. Certainly titles such as โ€œEmpty,โ€ โ€œWe Never Tellโ€ and โ€œNight Drive Lonelinessโ€ hint at the naked emotions and unfulfilled desires that push the blood to the heart of these songs.

Even when the sonic landscapes show glimmers of light, they take often sudden turns to dive back into the duskiness that hovers over nearly every track. It may not put any tunes from this Garbage set onto the charts, but clearly thatโ€™s not what influences this band, now over 20 years into their career.

Existing fans will appreciate the uptick in sheer moodiness and offbeat experimental tendencies matched with fluid, often hypnotic melodies the quartet displays on the majority of Strange Little Birds. Newcomers to the Garbage experience can start here and work themselves backwards through an impressively edgy catalog brimming with more of the same.