
Label: Heavenly Recordings
By Tyler Wright
Heโs a nylon God, heโs a fantasy, heโs Mr W4. Son of Ian, cult icon and the boy on the cover of โNew Boots and Panties!!โ โ Baxter Duryโs ninth studio album proves he is certainly more than all those things.
Forever genre-bending, Duryโs mediocre bar-chain inspired record is far from mediocre. Always curious, quirky and straight up fucking cool, Baxter is back with a fresh electronic twist on his signature spoken word swagger.
Produced with Paul Epworth following a barnstorming display at the Park at Glastonbury in 2024, Baxter Duryโs dance era is here, and it is extravagant and mindboggling, outrageous and confusing and sometimes just downright ridiculous.
Youโre welcomed to ‘Allbarone‘ by the title-track. A statement of a lead single. A head bopper. It does make you want to bust out the dad dance moves heโs doing on that boat in the music video. Helped along the way by his new right hand, frequent collaborator JGrrey, thereโs something quite special about a speaker pumping dance track with Baxter Dury talking about a bar whilst pronouncing its name like a pretentious second-home owner or a confused gran. It is a hit.
Youโre thrown straight into โSchadenfreudeโ, a spacey, synth-ridden extra-terrestrial banger. Heโs got ‘Schadenfreude‘. Sometimes Iโm not entirely sure what heโs on about. In the video, Iโm confused as to why people are doing backflips on MDMA and Iโm even more confused as to why heโs on a cheap flight to Lithuania. But again, it is an absolute trip.
Groovy and punchy, โKubla Khanโ is a foot-stomper packed with another fun, batshit instrumental. โAlpha Dogโ comes equipped with one of the most enjoyable, singalong choruses the record has to offer. Yet another song youโll find yourself clapping along to in the street. Textbook Baxter lyricism, but now you can really dance as you laugh at a clever quip.
The grungy bassline led โThe Other Meโ differs from what otherwise is a perfectly flowing record. A stopgap, if you like, from the type of banger that kicked off the album. The track is jam-packed with haunting backing vocals, that โyayayaโ feels like something out of a low-budget horror (in a good way). Short but sweet, the guest vocals are again a highlight on this one.
โHapsburgโ. Perhaps the pinnacle of Baxterโs new-found sound. Atmospheric choruses, a beat to step to and, of course, peak Baxter Dury songwriting. I bet you never thought youโd find yourself dancing to a song with lines mentioning such things as โfat duck fuckersโ and โthe international fuck omeletteโ โ or at least thatโs what I think Iโm hearing, maybe thatโll be a Peter Kay gag one day if Iโm wrong.
โReturn of the Sharp Headsโ is a superb single. JGrrey once more showcases immense talent. Itโs a mover. Itโs a toetapper. It is Baxter all over as he pokes fun at modern pretension and those swanning around London in โsignet rings, boiler suits, vintage cashmere‘. You will sing along, catch yourself screaming โIS THIS THE WRONG FLOOR?โ. Watch out for them soul fuckers and their beige, or gold lapels.
The record does come with its ultimate banger though, in the form of โMockingjayโ. Otherworldly. Crisp backing vocals with Baxter at his loudest and perhaps most raw. Making a claim for perhaps his best work ever let alone the best work on โAllbaroneโ, โMockingjayโ is prime Dury. It is everything this album set out to be.
As weโre played out by the floaty โMr W4โ โ a short showing of Baxter Duryโs staple wit and charm. It is time to leave ‘Allbarone‘, it is no longer a bar but an album of banging beats, humour and absurd lyricism. It is an album that doesnโt take itself too seriously. But you should, because what Baxter Dury has made here is a late career renaissance album โ though he never lost it. Heโs crafted perhaps his finest work, in his mid-fifties. So, tell me, are you coming to Allbarone?
Listen to ‘Allbarone‘ here:
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