Posted in Album Reviews

The Gorillaz – The Mountain (2026)

The newest album from cartoon band, The Gorillaz, is marked with grief, spirit, and remembrance. Both Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett lost close family members as they embarked to India to start working on The Mountain. The album has an international flair with Arabic singing on a couple of songs including “The Shadowy Light” and the peppy single, “The Manifesto” that is partly sung in Spanish, rapping courtesy of Trueno and Proof.

The album starts with the serene sounds of the title track, with its Indian influenced extended intro with spoken lyrics about the mountain and serenity standing out. The Indian sound later appears on “The Empty Dream Machine” where Albarn sings that “I thought I’d got my life straight”.  “The Hardest Things” is a shorter song on the emotions of trying to say goodbye, the theme carries over into “Orange County” with a few great verses by poet Kara Jackson.

Politics and religion clash a few times. Russell Mael from Sparks appears on “The Happy Dictator” about a trip Albarn took to Turkmenistan with his daughter where the leader of the country keeps bad news from the people in order to keep them happy. The welcome guitar sounds of Johnny Marr appear on a few tracks including the spacey “Plastic Guru” about a religious fraud who is focused on celebrity.

The voices of those who have left us are weaved throughout the album including Mark E. Smith, the rapping of Trugoy the Dove, Dennis Hopper, and the beloved Tony Allen amongst others. The album ends with two quieter, dreamy tracks concluding with God’s perspective on the sad state of humanity. “I gave you white sails to reach the sun/I gave you atoms, you built a bomb”. The Mountain is a fine album to escape into for an hour.

8/10

Posted in Album Reviews

Gorillaz – Cracker Island (2023)

In 2021 Damon Albarn released a very good solo album, blur has recently announced live shows so a new Gorillaz album was next on the to do list. Working with all star producer Greg Kurstin, the clubby synth stabs of the title track announce the beginning of the journey along with Thundercat. This is quickly followed up with one of the album highlights, the Stevie Nicks collaboration of “Oil”.  Albarn’s treated vocals are underpinned with the deeper Nicks.  A strident beat delivers the line, “individual actions change the world/fill them up with love”.  

Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker along with Bootie Brown bring a classic Gorillaz sound to “New Gold” before Albarn takes over on the underwater dreaminess of “Tarantula”.  Where Cracker Island lags is on a couple midtempo tracks.  An acoustic introduction is teased on “Skinny Ape” before it gets replaced by blips and bloops. An acoustic track would have been a welcome respite from the processed beats.  Cracker Island leaves the listener with a few good tracks and other missed opportunities.

7/10