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Normally this would lead to a lack of overall artistic cohesion, even though one might expect each band member’s contribution to be especially dense with inspiration.Īlas, nothing here will find a home in your next party’s playlist. Some triple-dipped, which resulted in a 14-track final product. Heartbeats and Brainwaves was written in an unusual way - Dick Valentine asked each of Electric Six’s members to write at least two songs. And the song’s chorus, though catchy, certainly doesn’t approach the greatness of earlier Electric Six earworms. Instead, it adds up to a muddled montage of imagery. Valentine croons, I’m never good at saying the right things / sometimes I say too much / sometimes I feel like a puppet with no strings / desperate and dying for your touch.īut this potentially interesting love song is so drenched in the mandatory manly non sequiturs it utterly fails to tell a cohesive story. Take, for example, the second track, “French Bacon.” This tells a tragic story of two people, the narrator and a nameless girl, who are tangled in a contradictory relationship: a painful attachment they both need. What results is an unfortunate compromise, a muted-sounding rendition of its older dumb-but-fun style that is at best unevenly enjoyable. In Heartbeats and Brainwaves, Electric Six tries to extricate itself, but also can’t quite pull itself away, from the now-worn unabashed manliness of its early days. Electric Six is older now, and evidently getting tired of the testosterone rock trimmings that long underpinned its popularity. This is surprising for a band that once reveled in dumbness. At one point in the track, frontman Dick Valentine sings I’m the king of the submarines / making terrible music for teens. Heartbeats and Brainwaves’ opener “Psychic Visions” seemingly constitutes an admission of wrongdoing.