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Afghan Whigs'
"Gentlemen"
(1993) Defining lyrics: "Baby you can open your
eyes now/And please allow me to present you with a clue/If I inflict the
pain/Then baby only I can comfort you" from the song "When We Two
Parted" Chaser: Whiskey, a shot glass, and a
mirror
"Gentlemen" ... more starts with a howling, foreboding wind, one that
sounds like it's ripping across a desolate wasteland. In this case, it's the
sound inside the angst-ridden brain of Afghan Whigs' leader Greg Dulli. And it's
the only calm you get during "Gentlemen," a small pause before an ugly
storm.
In the course of the album's 11 songs, Dulli details his own
failing relationship, sputtering, snarling and screaming emotions ranging from
hate to self-pity. It's easy to lash out at the one you loved. It's tougher to
gaze inward and admit your own fault. "Gentlemen" is mostly a look in the
mirror, a naked self-examination that spirals into deep self-loathing. "Tonight
I go to hell/For what I've done to you/This ain't about regret/It's when I tell
the truth," he sings on "Debonair," the, uh, hit from the album. Revealing truth
is what this album is all about. Self-reflection rarely feels this honest (John Lennon comes to mind), nor does it rock this
hard (the Whigs were such a tight, blaring unit). If you think there is any hope
for salvation, check out the album cover, which illustrates that this game
starts very early in life. "I waited for the joke, it never did arrive," Dulli
admits on the title track. Yep, nothing funny about this record.
Related: Top "I Hate Love" Songs of All
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