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The Black Keys

BlackKeysTurn Blue
Nonesuch/Warner

Once again, The Black Keys have shaken up their sound. Now onto their eighth album, people’s opinion of Turn Blue will depend on which Black Keys album they first heard. Purists of the original two-piece garage blues will once again be disappointed at the high production values and the infiltration of non-guitar and drum instruments.

El Camino-ians will lament the lack of ear-bursting rock. The truth lies somewhere in between. At its heights, Turn Blue is the best album to date for the band, and at worst, feels like a collection of B-sides from previous albums.

In Time, Turn Blue and Year In Review are perhaps the highlights, encapsulating all the various sounds the Keys have explored over years and filtering them into these brilliant songs. Fever is a nod to the fans of Camino, It’s Up To You Now harkens to the original blues sound of The Big Come Up and Dan Auerbach’s Keep It Hid, and Gotta Get Away is an uplifting and perfectly fitting outro.

The Black Keys’ ability to constantly adapt and evolve their sound is shown beautifully on Turn Blue, making it a solid eighth album and up there with their best, even if people don’t want to realise it.

DANIEL PRIOR

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