Spoon is possibly the most consistent band of the last 30
years. They’ve released ten albums since 1996, with only 2010’s Transference
registering as anything close to a dip. Their greatest albums, A Series of
Sneaks, Kill the Moonlight, Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga and They Want
My Soul are spread out evenly amongst their only slightly less great companions.
This would lead one to believe that Lucifer on the Sofa is due to become
another tent pole, but would also lead someone to become very disappointed after
listening to the first three songs here. “Held” is a bluesy, setlist opener a
’la “Rent I Pay” and Divine Fits’ “Flaggin’ a Ride”; comparatively it’s a slower
grower, but one that eventually earns its place as a lead-off. “The Hardest Cut”,
a perfectly acceptable piece of modern radio fodder, sounds out of place for a
band like Spoon, and “The Devil and Mr. Jones” feels like it could have been
pulled right off Elvis Costello’s newest album, which isn’t exactly a
compliment. These songs are good, but nevertheless, disappointments, and perhaps
most aggravatingly, unnecessarily belittled by their sequencing.
Lucifer on the Sofa is a very good Spoon album, one
that borrows from They Want My Soul more than anything on Hot
Thoughts, but none of that comes through until about 13 minutes in. That
sequencing isolates the more straightforward rock tracks to limit their visceral
appeal and doesn’t give the more cerebral highlights like “Astral Jacket” and the
“Satellite” a chance to help out. The seven songs that follow “The Devil and
Mr. Jones are great, each one seemingly better than the last before
coming to a stunning close with the title track. This album could have easily become
another classic from the band, but without the elevation those opening songs
need, and the build-up that “Lucifer on the Sofa” deserves, it’ll remain just
another notch in Spoon’s highly consistent streak.
~8
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