Cold War Kids - Robbers and Cowards

4/5 stars
Less Reagan-era missile crisis and more moralistic tales
Album review by Garry Thomson.
Published 10 February 2007
The debut album from Cold War Kids is as assured as it is lyrically vivid. Less Reagan-era missile crisis and more moralistic tales intertwined with Nathan Willett's vocals wavering between wobbly falsetto and bar room blues - stories of prisoners seeking redemption for the murder of his sister's would-be rapist and an alcoholic father looking back on the mess he's made. Not your usual tales of love and loss. It's here where they make their mark. It might be a tad obvious that these kids are singing from an evangelical viewpoint - they met at Christian College for god's sake - but when they are on form, whatever your viewpoint, you can't deny the focus with which these tunes were put together. 'Hang Me Up To Dry', with a driving piano rhythm and fuzzy guitar that comes over like Jeff Buckley playing some long lost Velvet Underground track, and the scuzzy 'Rubidoux', are standouts for a record that could be the start of something big. [Garry Thomson]

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