Honey’s Dead cover

Honey’s Dead

Released

It’s a lie that the Jesus & Mary Chain were merely rock classicists. They’ve often interfaced with what’s going on around them, either critically – Psychocandy seemed a spit in the eye to the ‘entryist’ chart pop that surrounded them in the mid ‘80s – or enthusiastically, as when their love of hip-hop informed 1989’s Automatic. It’s no surprise that Honey’s Dead bears some relationship with dance music, then; the beats on “Reverence” are precision-tooled, but they’re topped with some of the Mary Chain’s most piercing, unrelenting feedback and noise since their debut album. Elsewhere, it’s business as, mostly, usual: grinding, three-chord rock as metaphor for sin (“Teenage Lust”); tenderness concealed by provocation (“Almost Gold”); love as pain killer (“Good For My Soul”). All this, and “Tumbledown” samples Einstürzende Neubauten, a salute from one gang of noise-busters to another.

Jon Dale

Recommended by

Suggestions
Dust cover

Dust

Peter Murphy
Labyrinth cover

Labyrinth

The Moffs
Forever Now cover

Forever Now

The Psychedelic Furs
I Might Be Wrong cover

I Might Be Wrong

Radiohead
Boces cover

Boces

Mercury Rev
Radiator cover

Radiator

Super Furry Animals
Love Junk cover

Love Junk

The Pursuit of Happiness
Camera Melancholia cover

Camera Melancholia

Roy Montgomery
Guerrilla cover

Guerrilla

Super Furry Animals
I’ll Take Care of You cover

I’ll Take Care of You

Mark Lanegan
Rooms of the Magnificent cover

Rooms of the Magnificent

Ed Kuepper
Illuminated 1989 cover

Illuminated 1989

The Veldt