Phil Manley will already be known to fans of Total Music as a key member of the groups Trans Am and The Fucking Champs. To those of you who really keep your eye on the ball, you will also know that he released a solo album in 2011 called Life Coach. It is not that Life Coach but his new band Life Coach and their début album that we are concerned with in this review.
The journey that is You opens with “Sunrise.” Tambura and reversed guitar suggesting tantric formulae that are as much West Coast as they are eastern promise. Pretty soon this segues into “Alphawave,” the first proper groove of the album. It is near-impossible not to compare this number with Neu! 75. Believe me, I tried and ended up with my chakras spilling out in a decidedly unsightly manner. There’s the optimistic electric piano sevenths, that drumbeat that we shall not name and all of that major scale melodic decoration, but it is when Mitchell and Manley’s DNA helix of fifths starts to ascend that it starts to resemble something more NWOBHM or Satriani.
“Fireball” that follows it is one of the strongest tracks of the album. Equal parts AOR, glam-rock and new age, it’s like an anthem from a gruelling cycling tournament, under oppressively heavy gravity, with all to play for. It occupies a similar zone to the album’s other song, “Mind’s Eye,” which again fuses middle of the road rock with thrash shredding and optimised lead-lines reminiscent of the late Huw Lloyd Langton.
There’s a lot to listen to here, a lot of meat, a lot of good energy and if we might find the whole conceptual irony underpinning the album and the band starting to pall, the work itself stands tall on the basis of some strong playing and some very beautiful production.
The album cover’s a bit on the fugly side though.
-Iotar-
One thought on “Life Coach – Alphawaves”
My review of the Life Coach album for Freq. May contain gratuitous anti-MBV sentiments. http://t.co/H6CFfMaaKm