Editorial Reviews
Evil Heat (with Bonus DVD) [Enhanced]
Music Review:
Music Review
Beethoven: Missa Solemnis in D, Op123
Music: Feuer Frei [CD-single] [Import]
Confidentiel [Original recording remastered] [Import]
Carry on Up the Charts-Best of [Import]
Berg: Chamber Concerto; Three Orchestral Pieces, Op. 6; Violin Concerto
Closer Pt.1 [CD-single] [Import]
20 Super Sucessos, Vol. 3 [Import]
Amazon.com
On their new album, Evil Heat, Primal Scream set out to streamline the massive sound of 2000's superb Xtrmntr and to combine raw, sexually charged electro with raw, sexually charged rock & roll. That they succeed has much to do with the band's collaborators. Andy Weatherall returns to the fold and transforms "Autobahn 66" into a beautiful meditation that recalls Primal Scream's earlier Screamadelica and the autobahn fantasies of Krautrockers Neu!. Meanwhile, My Bloody Valentine's genius leader, Kevin Shields, feeds most of the other tracks through his disorientation and distortion effects deck, so that even the most punk tracks ("Skull X," "City") sound original. In the midst of it all, there's Bobbie Gillespie, posing furiously. But Evil Heat, perhaps accidentally, captures the paradox at the heart of great rock & roll: that the old ideas can be reinvented, sometimes as comedy, sometimes as revolution, and sometimes as both. --John Mulvey
From URB Magazine
Expectations for Evil Heat are immense, because after the psycho-tech freak fest that was 2000s XTRMNTR, it feels like Primal Scream is seriously "on to something." Never mind the top contributions from Jesus & Mary Chains Jim Reid, Led Zeppelin legend Robert Plant (on harmonica) and most significantly, Kevin Shields. The My Bloody Valentine mastermind is all over "City," a dirty little invasion tune that slams into glorious fuzz when Shields stomps on the accelerator. Evil Heat ... read more