The ever-winding path of
John Frusciante's solo career is a confusing one to say the least. Light years away from his contributions to
the Red Hot Chili Peppers as a guitar slinger from the school of
Hendrix,
Frusciante's solo albums have been visceral, howling affairs dealing with raw nerves and dark places in the human spirit. Now with both
PBX Funicular Intaglio Zone and the
Letur-Lefr EP that came just before it, his music becomes an unfiltered mesh of every conceivable style and idea at once. Recorded throughout 2011, the album was the result of
Frusciante's dream to create electronic music. "Ratiug" is one of the tracks more easily recognizable as a traditional rock song, but it's still a dizzying mixed bag. Moody alt-rock chord progressions and multi-tracked vocals float over collage-style drumbeats. A sample of the snare hit introduction from
Joy Division's "Disorder" is easily picked out, but less familiar sampled drum breaks make way for lazy horn sections and eventually a freestyle routine by MC Kinetic 9 rounds out the song over a bed of synth strings. This kind of experimentation runs wild throughout the album, with every song a collision of rudimentary electronics, gritty drum'n'bass rhythm tracks, and even a little dubstep wobble thrown in for good measure before quickly jumping ship to the next sound. There's no doubt that
Frusciante is sincere in his expression with this incredibly warped music. There's no easy explanation for these sounds, no context for a lot of the choices he makes with the rapid-fire style changes and jarring production choices that come one after another after another on almost every song here. Instead of sounding indulgent, or even busy, the field of sound
Frusciante creates sounds strangely uniform in its complete insanity. Much like the schizophrenic landscape of a record like
Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica,
PBX FIZ creates a language of its own out of the chaos, and by the end, we have a few hints at what kind of deeper message lies beneath the confusion. ~ Fred Thomas