The Red Hot Chili Peppers – ‘The Getaway’ [Review]

2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 Interview Guitar Guitarist Vocalist Vocals Drummer Drums Bass Bassist Feature Album Review CD Concert Gig Tickets Tour Download Stream Live Torrent Music Musician Record Label News Update Facebook YouTube Twitter VEVO Spotify iTunes Apple Music Band 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 The Red Hot Chili Peppers The Getaway Dark Necessities We Turn Red The Longest Wave Goodbye Angels Sick Love Go Robot Feasting On The Flowers Detroit This Ticonderoga Encore Hunter Dreams Of A Samurai Anthony Keidis Flea John Frusicante Josh Klinghoffer Chad Smith I'm With You Monarchy Of Roses Factory Of Faith Brendan's Death Song Ethiopia Annie Wants A Baby Look Around The Adventures Of Rain Dance Maggie Did I Let You Know Goodbye hooray happiness loves company police station even you brutus? meet me at the corner dance dance dance Stadium arcadium dani california snow hey oh charlie hump de bump she's only 18 slow cheetah torture me strip my mind especially in michigan warlocks c'mon girl wet sand hey desecration smile tell me baby hard to concentrate 21st century she looks to me readymade if make you feel better animal bar so much i storm in a teacup we believe turn it again death of a martian by the way universally speaking this is the place dosed don't forget me the zephyr song can't stop i could die for you midnight throw away your television cabron tear on mercury minor thing warm tape venice queen californication around the world parallel universe scar tissue otherside get on top easily porcelain emit remmus i like dirt this velvet glove savior purple stain right on time road trippin one hot minute dave navarro warped aeroplane deep kick my friends coffee shop pea one big mob walkabout tearjerker falling into grace shallow be thy game transcending out in LA higher ground hollywood africa if you want me to stay behind the sun castles made of sand special secret song inside FU get up and jump green heaven police helicopter nevermind sex rap blues for meister you always sing the same stranded flea fly what it is deck the halls the power of equality if you have to ask breaking the girl funky monks suck my kiss i could have lies mellowship slinky in b major the righteous and the wicked give it away blood sugar sex magik under the bridge naked in the rain apache rose peacock the greeting song my lovely man sir psycho sexy they're red hot mother's milk good time boys subway to venue magic johnson nobody weird like me knock me down taste the pain stone cold bush fire pretty little ditty punk rock classic sexy mexican maid johnny, kick a hole in the sky the uplift mofo party plan fight like a brave funky crime me and my friends backwoods skinny sweaty man behind the sun subterranean homesick blues party on your pussy no chump love sucker walkin' on down the road love trilogy organic anti-beat box band freaky styley jungle man blackeyed blonde the brohters cup battleship lovin and touchin catholic school girls rule thirty dirty birds yertle the turtle true men don't kill coyotes baby appeal buckle down get up and jump why don't you love me green heaven mommy where's daddy you always sing the same

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Over the past thirty-two years, the Red Hot Chili Peppers have carved a singular swathe through the musical jungle, strutting and preening like one of a kind wildlife. Unlike the majority of musicians so desperate to give off an air of idiosyncrasy, studiously cultivating an image in line with the trends of the times, the Chilis more than look the part. They walk the walk –and that is an undeniable fact.

The Red Hot Chili Peppers are also renowned for their ability to consistently reinvent themselves without kowtowing to the powers that be or watering their art down into a supermarket-own-brand shadow of what it’s sounded like in the past. This is a band who’ve made it on their own terms, and have earned every last sliver of respect afforded them. On The Getaway, the Red Hot Chili Peppers continue their evolution as only they can.

The Getaway sees the Chilis exploring lush, laid-back territory, a landscape of graceful piano, largely clean guitars, lilting funk, and low-key synths. Occasionally, proceedings take a turn for the cathartic, but even then there’s enough restraint to prevent the Chilis’ widely admired chops from overpowering the song, wrestling it to the ground, and ruining the whole thing. Goodbye Angels is a case in point, catching Anthony Keidis lamenting a lost one amid a tormented tropical storm of dark lyrics, heavily effected guitars, and seething synth lines; that tune climaxes with a solid outpouring of energy, but it’s anger balanced equally with love rather than a one-sided rush through Hell.

Largely gone are the rock-oriented tracks that drove so many past Chilis albums. When rock-inclined songs do surface (Detroit; This Ticonderoga) they prove weak points; it pains me to say it, but This Ticonderoga is actually skippable. The Getaway as a whole makes it clear that the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ comfort zone has unarguably shifted into the mellow section of the spectrum – but that’s no bad thing.

Regardless of how you might choose to pigeonhole the Chilis, their personalities are so strong both individually and collectively that every song on this album is unmistakably them. Anthony Keidis remains one of the world’s greatest lyricists; Josh Kinghoffer continues to solidify his reputation as a twenty-first-century Hendrix; Flea is…well…Flea, a bassist so formidable that the mere mention of his name sends four-stringers into rapture; and barely anybody in the world can match Chad Smith’s skin-beating skills, apart perhaps from Will Ferrell. Whatever they choose to turn their hands to, the Red Hot Chili Peppers never fail to mutate it just so, filling every moment with gorgeous details galore.

In terms of highlights, for me it’s all about final tunes The Hunter and Dreams Of A Samurai. The former is a Beatles-influenced ballad, absolutely perfect in terms of arrangement and orchestration; the latter veers into 10/8, making an odd time signature choice flow as naturally as 4/4 while Josh Kinghoffer waxes virtuosic over a groove drenched in top-class cool. But honestly, bar Detroit and This Ticonderoga, The Getaway lands as close to perfection as any Chilis fan could hope for.

Whether employing stiff-limbed rhythms and deadpan humour on Go Robot, opening the whole album with perfectly captured Californian vibes via gentle delay on title track The Getaway, digging into rolling riffs on We Turn Red, or ruminating elegantly over overdrive on Feasting On The Flowers, the Red Hot Chili Peppers are definitively back and just as badass as ever, regardless of how heavy they decide to go. As an album, The Getaway embodies escapism, providing listeners with an oasis amid the aridity of everyday life. I recommend you seek shelter there immediately.

TMMP RATING: 98% (Essential Listening!)

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Posted on 17 June 2016

2 responses to “The Red Hot Chili Peppers – ‘The Getaway’ [Review]”

  1. Anne Horst Ahrens says:

    Love your review, except for your opinion of “This Ticondiroga”. Glad you agree the album as a whole is totally badass, ’cause it is. It’s like a melting pot of multiple genres as only our California boys can do!

    • musicalmeltingpot says:

      Totally! It still sounds like them, despite the stylistic shift. Definitely the mark of a great band.

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