The problem is that things aren’t always as compelling or adventurous, musically speaking, as Gavin’s soul-baring confessions. They are big canvases, no question, but they’re occasionally listless, and sometimes even hookless. In those instances, Gavin’s lyrics and the sultry purr carry things.
Thankfully, the likes of The Land Of Milk And Honey, 60 Ways To Forget People and Love Me Till The Pain Fades deliver even-handedly, with words and dynamics working together, but that’s not always the case. Sometimes, as on We Are Of This Earth and Everyone Is Broken, it feels like Gavin is so enamoured with the sonics that he’s happy for them just to thrum away idly, not taking the listener anywhere.
As I Beat Loneliness nears its end, things take an upturn with a trio of tracks – Don’t Be Afraid, Footsteps In The Sand, Rebel With A Cause – that offer a sparseness, refinement and urgency you wish Gavin had employed to a greater extent. But the Bush frontman has always bucked the trend. He is, after all, the man who released a grunge record (Sixteen Stone) to great success at the very point when grunge had been declared dead and people were trading plaid shirts for parkas with the arrival of Britpop.
Those instincts have served Gavin well over the years. Now, however, you sense his overwhelming desire for catharsis through creation may have impeded his editing abilities, leaving him unable to separate wheat from chaff. That’s a shame, because at its best, I Beat Loneliness is revelatory. Elsewhere, sadly, it’s rote. Gavin may claim to have beaten loneliness, but he’s been thwarted by his own ambitions.
Verdict: 3/5
For fans of: Seether, Alice In Chains, Filter
I Beat Loneliness is due out on July 18 via earMUSIC. Catch Bush supporting Volbeat in the UK later this year – get your tickets now.
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