This man is aware of he shouldn’t say the phrase “pussy.” The protagonist of Geordie Greep’s “Holy, Holy” has simply spent two minutes yapping at a lady about his sexual fame—how well-known he’s among the many Japanese and French Guyanese, how he’s like a god to the “jihadis” and “revolutionaries”—when he stumbles right into a wildly distasteful pickup line. “I’ll guess your pussy is holy, too,” he says, chomping down on the phrase prefer it’s a cocktail straw between rear molars. He doesn’t wish to say it, you may inform, however he can’t assist himself, torn as he’s between good manners and a crippling horniness that may solely come from being profoundly lonely.
That strained “pussy” is the linchpin of The New Sound, the previous black midi frontman’s debut solo document. That is an album filled with dudes who’re beset by a distress they’ll’t talk, one which forces them into saying and doing issues they know they in all probability shouldn’t. Throughout its 62 minutes, males in bars and nightclubs and boardrooms appear nearly as in the event that they’re competing to see who can abase themselves the furthest. These males aren’t gigachads or alphas on the hunt, although most of them aspire to each. They’re, to a person, ridiculous. “I might’ve disemboweled myself simply to carry your hand,” one declares, whereas one other, infected by a intercourse employee with school aspirations, insists that he’s curious “to see what you consider Proust.” They’re failures on their very own phrases—seldom do they appear to efficiently mattress a lady, even once they’re making an attempt to pay for intercourse—which makes their failures of ethics and good style even starker.
Relying in your appreciation of over-the-top style exercises à la Frank Zappa and Mr. Bungle, it’s both a deft inventive gambit or simply scrumptious irony that these unsubtle, simply hateable characters are the point of interest of unsubtle music that usually dangers being extremely annoying. As a satirist, Greep shares an absurdist humanism and love of basic songwriting with Randy Newman (although it’s tough to image the latter singing a line like “You’ll be able to cum greater than 100 stallions”), however he lets each play out as minor parts inside a turbulent, mile-a-minute model. Throughout The New Sound, his characters chatter their manner by means of a pub mixture of uneven salsa, mid-century showtunes, easy jazz, Isley Brothers guitar disco, big-budget samba, and a dozen different types you might think about the characters in a Steely Dan track listening to (together with the music of Steely Dan).