Arctic Monkeys, ‘R U Mine’ – Review

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Ignore the Prince-like nature of the title spelling, ‘R U Mine’ is a riff-tastic, 70’s-indebted monster.


With its mountainous Free-like fret work, harmony vocals from Turner and Helders and fills a-plenty drum work, ‘R U Mine’ is the band chomping at the bit to go back to their Desert Session, Josh Homme-produced best. Sure it’s more ‘Humbug’ than ‘Suck It And See’ but that doesn’t mean that the track is lacking a distinct sense of melody. Au contraire!

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The riff in the chorus feels instantly knowable, as if its just waiting to get man-handled by a million spotty kids in instruments shops, huddling over their first electric guitars and trying to find the right power chords, failing manfully and just plumping for a bad rendition of ‘Smoke On The Water’ instead.

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Alex’s vocal delivery is full of machismo – it feels like he’s become his 50’s rocker look and is singing with the appropriate level of vim, spit and vigor. Still, the biggest surprise might be Helders’ falsetto-vocal break down in the bridge which turns up the white boy funk, recalling another Desert Session acolyte: Jesse Hughes. ‘R U Mine’ sounds like a band in love with the sonic possibilities of their guitars again. And it plays like the best sort of dumb fun you can have.

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