• NME.COM
  • Saturday, 22 November 2008
NEW!

NME Reviews

Deftones : Back To School (Mini Maggit)

Mini-LP from angst-ridden Californians

The daffodils are up. Easter eggs are on the menu. Er, 'Back To School'? Due to the vagaries of international record selling,
it's only with GCSE revision looming that we get an official UK release of a key skills Deftones tune, from which the 'Back To School' mini-album takes its name. Released as a single in the US last September, now with some extra tracks,
it's finally out over here. Oh, do keep up.


"Keep up" is just the sort of sentiment you might have heard hyperactive nu-metal head boy Chino Moreno express on last year's lengthy Deftones world tour. Then there's "oof", "get
the fuck up!", and "waaaaurgh!",
all featured on the clutch of
live tracks which flesh out this mini-album. Alongside an alternative mix of 'Change (In The House Of Flies)', 'BTS' itself and a short film, released to coincide with the recent Deftones European field trip.

http://microsites.nme.com/reviewsimg/MatthewJay0401.jpg
The tunes, meanwhile, are
still a mighty hybrid of guy-positive skate-rock and epically wallowing student music.
They're The Cure with pitbulls instead of lovecats, the Bizkit
it's OK to feel vulnerable to.
'Back To School', for one,
invites the skulking kids in black to a supercharged pep rally all their own. Meanwhile, former single 'Change...' learns some acoustic guitar and gains both in grace and horror. Live, there's reminders of the Deftones' rap-punk roots in the scrimmage of 'Nosebleed', plus the stunning 'Feiticeira', a thriller made complete by audience screams.


And then there's the arty long video set in a toxic future dystopia where the air makes your skin peel off. It's to the Deftones' credit that their visuals most often come from the clever, stylish end of their aesthetic spectrum. There's the white pony, the Japanese lettering, and now, this genuinely uneasy homage to 1984 (with added rawhide sex scene) that starkly illustrates their musical intentions: foreboding, fearsome, and wracked all at the same time. Good work.


Kitty Empire

7 out of 10

Add your comment

NME Alerts

Get NME news delivered direct to your desktop. Find out more

This Week's Issue
  • NME Magazine - The ultimate guide to the week in music
  • The ultimate guide to the week in music
  • NME Magazine - Subscribe now and save up to £45!
Please sign in

Forgot your password?

Register with MyNME

Every Tuesday and Friday

  • Up-to-the-minute news stories
  • The best new music and free downloads
  • Video interviews, photo galleries, competitions and more
  • Album and track reviews for the week ahead
  • Essential gigs in your area