Label: Heavenly Recordings

Rating: 5 out of 5.
By Tyler Wright

Heโ€™s a nylon God, heโ€™s a fantasy, heโ€™s Mr W4. Son of Ian, cult icon and the boy on the cover of โ€˜New Boots and Panties!!โ€™ โ€“ Baxter Duryโ€™s ninth studio album proves he is certainly more than all those things.

Forever genre-bending, Duryโ€™s 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 Duryโ€™s dance era is here, and it is extravagant and mindboggling, outrageous and confusing and sometimes just downright ridiculous.

Youโ€™re 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 heโ€™s doing on that boat in the music video. Helped along the way by his new right hand, frequent collaborator JGrrey, thereโ€™s 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.

Youโ€™re thrown straight into โ€˜Schadenfreudeโ€™, a spacey, synth-ridden extra-terrestrial banger. Heโ€™s got ‘Schadenfreude‘. Sometimes Iโ€™m not entirely sure what heโ€™s on about. In the video, Iโ€™m confused as to why people are doing backflips on MDMA and Iโ€™m even more confused as to why heโ€™s on a cheap flight to Lithuania. But again, it is an absolute trip.

Groovy and punchy, โ€˜Kubla Khanโ€™ is a foot-stomper packed with another fun, batshit instrumental. โ€˜Alpha Dogโ€™ comes equipped with one of the most enjoyable, singalong choruses the record has to offer. Yet another song youโ€™ll 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 โ€˜The 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 โ€˜yayayaโ€™ 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.

โ€˜Hapsburgโ€™. Perhaps the pinnacle of Baxterโ€™s new-found sound. Atmospheric choruses, a beat to step to and, of course, peak Baxter Dury songwriting. I bet you never thought youโ€™d find yourself dancing to a song with lines mentioning such things as โ€˜fat duck fuckersโ€™ and โ€˜the international fuck omeletteโ€™ โ€“ or at least thatโ€™s what I think Iโ€™m hearing, maybe thatโ€™ll be a Peter Kay gag one day if Iโ€™m wrong.

โ€˜Return of the Sharp Headsโ€™ is a superb single. JGrrey once more showcases immense talent. Itโ€™s a mover. Itโ€™s a toetapper. It is Baxter all over as he pokes fun at modern pretension and those swanning around London in โ€˜signet rings, boiler suits, vintage cashmere‘. You will sing along, catch yourself screaming โ€œIS 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 โ€˜Mockingjayโ€™. 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 โ€˜Allbaroneโ€™, โ€˜Mockingjayโ€™ is prime Dury. It is everything this album set out to be.

As weโ€™re played out by the floaty โ€˜Mr W4โ€™ โ€“ a short showing of Baxter Duryโ€™s 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 doesnโ€™t 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. Heโ€™s 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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