Phil Mongredien 

Billy Idol: Kings & Queens of the Underground review – a turkey of epic proportions

‘Edgy’ rock numbers, dreary ballads, clumsy lyrics and hammy delivery - yes, Billy Idol’s back, writes Phil Mongredien
  
  

Billy Idol- Press photo credit Michael Muller
The sneer is back: Billy Idol relives his 80s glory days on his new album, Kings & Queens of the Underground. Photograph: Michael Muller Photograph: Michael Muller/PR

His first record since an ill-judged 2006 Christmas covers album, Kings & Queens finds Billy Idol attempting to rekindle his mid-80s, sneering-MTV-fixture glory days. To that end, he ropes in Trevor Horn on production duties, but this collection of “edgy” rock numbers (Postcards from the Past, in particular, sounds like a pastiche of his biggest hits) and dreary ballads is a turkey of epic proportions. At least it’s entertaining, though: the autobiographical title track showcases some of the clumsiest lyrics since the Cranberries’ demise (“1984, and Rebel Yell had the floor/All we said was, ‘More, more, more’”) and his hammy scream on Eyes Wide Shut is straight out of an Ed Wood production. Meanwhile, “rocky roads” are ridden, “bitter pills” are swallowed and towns are “crazy”, as Idol leaves no cliche knowingly unturned. Rubbish, yes, but unwittingly hilarious rubbish.

 

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