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Placebo - Meds
(EMI) UK release date: 13 March 2006
4 stars
Placebo - Meds

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track listing

1. Meds (feat. Alisson Mosshart)
2. Infra-Red
3. Drag
4. Space Monkey
5. Follow The Cops Back Home
6. Post Blue
7. Because I Want You
8. Blind
9. Pierrot The Clown
0. Broken Promise (feat. Michael Stipe)
11. One Of A Kind
12. In The Cold Light Of Morning
13. Song To Say Goodbye

related
ALBUM:
Placebo - Battle For The Sun

ALBUM:
Placebo - Meds

ALBUM:
Placebo - Once More With Feeling: Singles 1996-2005

ALBUM:
Placebo - Sleeping With Ghosts

GIG:
Placebo @ Academy, Newcastle

GIG:
Placebo @ Brixton Academy, London

MUSIC DVD:
Placebo - Soulmates Never Die: Live In Paris 2003

TRACK:
Placebo - Song To Say Goodbye

TRACK:
Placebo - Because I Want You

TRACK:
Placebo - English Summer Rain

TRACK:
Placebo - Special Needs

TRACK:
Placebo - This Picture

TRACK:
Placebo - The Bitter End

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Placebo


Few will argue that Placebo are among the great rock bands. They could however, be even better and have been let down in the past by albums that consistently fall narrowly short of the mark, principally due to a couple of average songs tainting the surrounding brilliance.

One might expect that with three years (almost to the day) since the last album proper (ignore the singles album Once More With Feeling) Placebo would have had the time to craft and finally deliver that perfect album.

Traditionally, Placebo's albums kick-off with bollock-crunchingly gigantic openers. This can be seen right across the Placebo discography, from 1996's self-titled debut to 2003's Sleeping With Ghosts with songs such as Pure Morning, Taste In Men, and Bulletproof Cupid. In comparison, Meds' opening title-track is a little curtailed, but certainly doesn't compromise on the energy front and is perfect testament to Placebo's uncanny knack of writing an instantly loveable track.

The opening onslaught continues through the eerily divine Infra-Red and the anthemic Drag. The pairing of the down-tempo Space Monkey and Follow The Cops Back Home however, is the first sign of trouble for Meds. They function as the more delicate antidote to the fury of what has come before. These dark songs are good, but sound bloated and leave the listener yearning for a faster tempo and a huge guitar. That demand is quenched with the excellent Post Blue, marking the beginning of another wave of the kind of guitar driven mayhem that has made Placebo's name - this is where the trio are at their finest.

Brian love-him-or-hate-him Molko is sublime throughout, both vocally, and lyrically. He is blessed with one of the most distinctive and addictive voices in rock and its return on Meds is most welcome. His lyrics are more cutting and darker than on preceding albums and are delivered with a chilling dramaticism.

And dramatic is exactly what this album is - not in an overblown catsuit wearing, falsetto fucking Darkness way - but dramatic in a way that makes it sound like some sort of apocalyptic soundtrack filled with soaring frenetic highs and deep engaging lows, united by an air of terror to every song. The sincerity of it all is addictive and utterly captivating, and, if I'm honest, slightly scary.

Darker than its predecessors the harrowing Meds is as close Placebo have come to that perfect album. That's not to say there aren't better songs on earlier records, but for the first time Placebo have released an album that sounds like a whole piece of work rather than simply a collection of songs - a flaw Placebo have fallen to in the past. This is their best yet. Essential.

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