Blogs
Fri Sep 5, 7:36 AM
Thu Sep 4, 1:39 PM
Thu Sep 4, 11:44 AM
Wed Sep 3, 12:42 PM
Thu Sep 4, 3:20 PM
Thu Sep 4, 12:00 PM
Wed Sep 3, 3:18 PM
Sun Aug 31, 6:25 AM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Brooke Foster
Meds (Astralwerks)
After a hiatus prompted by mental illness, Low is back swingin'.
The year's first essential film event is in Columbia.
No related articles found
National Features >
SF Weekly
A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.
By Ashley Harrell
Westword
How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.
By Alan Prendergast
Miami New Times
The family of a dead judge blames a creeping fungus in the federal courthouse.
By Tim Elfrink
Placebo
Meds (Astralwerks)
Published on May 18, 2006
The pot-'n'-sex paean "Pure Morning" may have given British glam-rockers Placebo stateside recognition, and the irresistible single "Every You Every Me" (featured on the Cruel Intentions soundtrack) might've found its way onto quite a few mix tapes but it's albums like Meds that give the trio its staying power. Anchored by the inimitable voice of gender-bending frontman Brian Molko, these 13 tracks veer from ass-kicking guitar squalls (opener "Meds," which features the Kills' Alison Mosshart) to the sexy threats of "Infra-Red" and the broken-heart-dragged-across-broken-glass ballad "Follow the Cops Back Home." The affable Molko is in top form here, both vocally and lyrically; Meds is blessedly bereft of the heavy-handed, oh-poor-me laments that mar some of Placebo's earlier efforts. Particularly delicious is the Michael Stipe duet "Broken Promise," a song about adultery that begins with gentle piano and the R.E.M. singer's soft, sweet crooning and explodes into Stipe and Molko sing-screaming, I'll wait my turn/To tear inside you/Watch you burn/I'll wait my turn. Yeah, androgyny never sounded so hot.