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The Cult
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The Cult have released a new album! This is exciting for anyone who has gone sick on the dancefloor to She Sells Sanctuary or Wildflower. Herewith, a review of the new album, Born Into This (Roadrunner Records), as well as an interview with Ian Astbury conducted in October. Fingers are crossed for a tour in 08.
Interview with Ian Astbury of The Cult
It's fair to say that The
Doors have lit Ian Astbury's
fire. Or at least, re-lit it.
The Cult frontman found a
new profile when he joined
members of The Doors to
form The Doors of the 21st
Century and toured the world
paying tribute to Jim
Morrison's seminal band. It
was a natural fit for Astbury,
who clearly channelled
Morrison as he led his English
rock outfit to, well, cult
fandom during the 1980s.
Hits like She Sells Sanctuary,
Fire Woman and Love
Removal Machine couldn't
keep the ball rolling, however,
and the band limped through
the '90s plagued by tensions,
reforming around Astbury
and guitarist Billy Duffy to
produce only three albums
since 1990, including 2001's
lavish Between Good and Evil.
Playing with original Doors
members Robby Krieger and
Ray Manzarek revived
Astbury's interest in his own
band's work, and stoked his
ambitions as a songwriter.
``The Cult were never really
a career band,'' he says from
New York, having moved
from the UK to the US in the
late '80s. ``We grew out of
punk rock, following our idols
like Bowie and Iggy Pop.
Performance was the most
important thing.
``But over time, songwriting
has become more important.
``Touring with The Doors
made me respect the
songwriting process,'' he says.
``I started to think, why not
me? Why can't I aspire to that
pantheon of excellence? Not
to garner credit or respect
from anyone else, but as a
personal challenge."
The result was a 2006
international tour with Cult
guitarist Billy Duffy and new
chums Chris Wyse on bass,
Mike Dimkitch on rhythm
guitar and John Tempesta on
drums, gigs in Europe and
now a new album, Born Into
This, and another
international tour (with
Southern Hemisphere gigs on
the cards).
Astbury quit The Doors of
the 21st Century, aka Riders
on the Storm, early this year to give The Cult his full attention.
``We came into the studio
with a sense that the songs
were most important, not the
circus that happens around
them, not worrying about
what other people would say
about them.
``Our aim was to do it
quickly, not to let it get too
laboured, not second-guessing
ourselves."
While Between Good and
Evil took more than a year to
record, Born To This was
recorded in 36 days and is,
Astbury says, ``a Polaroid of
where we're at''.
``This album has mistakes
all over it. Could I have
arranged it better? Probably.
Could we have got better
sounds? Probably. But it's
where I'm at creatively. It's
spontaneous. It was written in
New York, LA, London, Paris,
the Himalayas.''
Those looking for Doors-
like mysticism and Native
American leanings harking
back to the Cult's heyday will
not find it here. The songs on
Born To This are raw rock 'n'
roll mined from the pages of
newspapers and magazines,
from urban streets and, in the
case of Holy Mountain, India;
``they're observational, they're
reportage'', Astbury says.
There is little judgment as
he mirrors urban decay, the
drug trade, the cult of
celebrity: the song provides
the vignette and it's up to the
listener to make up their
mind about the morality of
the issue.
The first single, Dirty Little
Rockstar, ``looks at the culture,
the obsession with media and
celebrity, and this consumer
culture, consuming
magazines about celebrities.
It's an opiate. What does it say
about the quality of our real
lives, our internal lives?''
``It looks at how women are
objectified in the culture, how
eight year olds are sexualised
to these images: is this a
healthy thing?
``The term rockstar itself
has been appropriated by soft
drink companies and fashion
labels. `Party like a rock star'
_ what does that mean? If
you hold it up and look
behind it, there's nothing
there."
While Astbury has found
new if not deeper meaning
behind the craft of
songwriting, he still enjoys the
Cult back catalogue, even if
he's looking forwards, not
backwards.
``The meaning of songs
changes according to where
I'm at; sometimes I might
come at them from the other
side.
``Edie (Ciao, Baby) is a good
example. Originally it was
about Edie Sedgwick but now
I realise it's biographical, I was
writing about myself. So now
I sing it like that. The lyrics
might be a little sophomoric
but hey, I was just a kid -- give
me a break."

Born Into This - review
IAN Astbury, revived by heading the remnants of The Doors on a global excursion, hooked up with his old band mate Billy Duffy and kicked The Cult back into tour mode in 2006. They're still at it, and have knocked out this superb rock 'n' roll album in the process. Unlike the previous Cult album, 2001's Beyond Good and Evil, this is a much simpler effort, with a lot less time spent twiddling in the studio. It's a vital album, harking back to the classic Cult sound of the '80s (in particular, on I Assassin) while not dwelling on it nor seeking to replicate it.
The first single, Dirty Little Rockstar, is as catchy as a cold, and sets the theme that suggests Astbury and Co. are a little over the world's apparent preoccupation with fame and other irrelevancies.
The title track is set in New York, Citizens in Paris; both songs suggest social upheaval is going to get worse before it gets better. Holy Mountain comes across not dissimilar to a Johnny Cash ballad, a rumination from Astbury's sojourn in India. Tiger in the Sun is a killer track, side-swiping the Iraq war as it storms along on solid percussion. Savages also takes a political bent, but the message is buried in the vagueness and not even sound bytes from newsreels are able to firmly anchor it.
This shows a band not happy to rest on its greatest hits collection when there's still fresh music to be made.
Cult official website
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