One of the original batch of bands that started mixing indie rock, post-punk, and disco-influenced rhythms in the '90s,
Q and Not U return with
Power, an album that nods to dance-punk's moment in the sun and also finds them adding more dimensions to their already versatile sound. Like
Les Savy Fav,
Q and Not U are among the strongest songwriters working in this style, and on
Power, they're equally adept at short, sharp shocks like "L.A.X." and more introspective pieces such as "Dine." This ebb and flow makes the album less forceful than previous work like
No Kill No Beep Beep, but it also makes
Power more interesting, even if the ping-ponging between quietly quirky pieces like "Throw Back Your Head," an oddly folky, flute-driven song, and brainy, spazzy pop like "Wet Work" is disconcerting at first. It's tempting to single out
Power's most singular moments, like the medieval harmonies on "District Night Prayer," as the album's highlights, because they're such a departure; however, "Book of Flags" and "Tag-Tag" are prime examples of the band's undeniably kinetic punk-funk. "Wonderful People" and "Beautiful Beats" are even more danceable, but still retain that paranoid, too-smart-for-their-own-good feel of all of
Q and Not U's work. This feeling comes to the fore on the tense, "Glass Onion"-esque "Collect the Diamonds" and "X-Polynation," which both echo the trend of mixing politics and dance-punk, but do so more subtly, and timelessly, than the rants of
!!! and
Radio 4. Even when there are plenty of other bands working in a similar style,
Q and Not U remain more distinctive and harder to classify than many of their peers, which makes
Power an exciting album and proof that the band has variety and vitality to spare. ~ Heather Phares