
Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to turn up the heat with a brand new single by a scorching California-based rock band with yet another daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Holding the reputation of being one of the most successful bands in contemporary Alternative Rock with sales records on the US Billboard charts for their singles, six Grammy award wins, over 100 million record sales worldwide and an induction into the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame, alongside the band receiving a star on Hollywood’s Walk Of Fame earlier this year, it’s a pretty big deal that The Red Hot Chilli Peppers are making their first proper comeback in quite a long time, although I have to hold my hands up and admit that I am a little late to the party for this occasion. ‘Unlimited Love’ is the band’s 12th studio album and their upcoming follow-up to 2016’s ‘The Getaway’ and it is currently set to be releasing as soon as April 1st – that is next Friday – on Warner Records. The main draw for this new release is how it is their first album to feature the returning bassist John Frusciante, who originally left the band in 2009 and rejoined in 2019, replacing Josh Klingghoffer. In addition to this, it re-unites the band with longtime producer Rick Rubin for the first time since 2011. The band will also be going on a new world tour to support the album, beginning this June. Check out their comeback single ‘Black Summer’ below.
“Our only goal is to get lost in the music. We spent thousands of hours, collectively and individually, honing our craft and showing up for one another, to make the best album we could”, The Red Hot Chilli Peppers explain about their impending LP, adding, “Our antennae attuned to the divine cosmos, we were just so damn grateful for the opportunity to be in a room together, and, once again, try to get better. Days, weeks and months spent listening to each other, composing, jamming freely, and arranging the fruit of those jams with great care and purpose. The sounds, rhythms, vibrations, words and melodies had us enrapt”, in a press statement. ‘Black Summer’ finds lead vocalist Anthony Kiedis waiting for a period of depression to end, as the title may indicate to you, as he croons somber refrains like “A sailor spoke too soon, and China’s on the dark side of the moon” and “The archers on the run, and no one stands alone behind the sun” that are delivered over the top of some familiar fretwork from guitarist Flea. The track has a naturally uplifting chorus that it transitioned neatly between a tastefully meandering lead guitar solo in the middle of the track, and the fluctuating Drums help to convey the fuzzed-out and psychedelic sounds of classic Chilli Peppers’ music. Lyrics like “Riding on a headless horse to make the trip” dice with death as a brief theme, while the final bridge of “Waiting for another black summer to end” is destined to be sung by festival crowds later in the year. The main vocals have a fairly chilled and a reasonably paled back feel to them, while the ascending guitar solo ensures that we ride a propulsive wave until the duration meets its end. Most notably, it follows the formula of how you would expect a Red Hot Chilli Peppers track to sound while making the sound feel contemporary due to the explorations of mental health that captures the mood of a modern male audience. It is an anthemic single for those who struggle with the exhaustive daily commitments of modern life, but the sound takes obvious cues from nostalgia and the records of The Red Hot Chilli Pepper’s past. Ultimately, I felt this rolled along rather nicely and one of my initial fears was that the band may be a bit too old now to pull off their old lyrical shtick as effectively. On the contrary, the songwriting feels mature enough to bypass that issue and despite feeling a bit predictable, it is crowd pleasing stuff that just sounds like The Red Hot Chilli Peppers. It was better than I expected, and it feels as relieving as the pandemic-ridden closure of a black summer.

That’s all for now! Thank you for checking out my latest post and I hope to see you again tomorrow for ‘Scuzz Sundays’ where I have chosen a simple song about love that would kind-of fit the theme of Mother’s Day too. I was inspired to cover this early 00’s Glam-Rock classic due to the band’s frontman’s recent appearances on both ‘Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway’ and ‘Rock Till You Drop’ on UK television screens.
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