Friday, May 21, 2021

Single review: Duran Duran unleashes 'Invisible' with eye toward future, past

Duran Duran has been going big for more than 40 years, and the band shows no sign of stopping with new single "Invisible."

The song, from the forthcoming "Future Past" that's set for release Oct. 22 via Tape Modern/BMG, is one of 12 album tracks, plus three bonus tracks. Two more of the album's song titles revealed by band members so far are "All of You" and "Can't Say That It's Love," both purportedly featuring Bowie pianist Mike Garson.

But "Invisible" is the only song to have surfaced thus far, and its whispered intro may be the only quiet thing about it. The members of Duran, behind producer Erol Alkan, form a wall of sound with Nick Rhodes' funky keyboards, John Taylor's slap bass, and Roger Taylor's powerful electro drums. Graham Coxon's guitar stabs are at times reminiscent of early Andy Taylor. 

Among modern-day Duran albums, the sound falls somewhere between the slickly produced electro pop of "Paper Gods" and the more organic "All You Need Is Now." But whatever sound Duran decides to go for, the be-all-end-all is Simon Le Bon's voice. 

Whether the music on "Future Past" is an identifiable as Duran as Le Bon's vocals remains to be seen. For his part, Alkan promises that the songs he has produced capture the "spirit and dynamic" of Duran "as I know them now, or as I remember them whilst growing up." 

"Invisible" is backed by a spooky new video by AI "director" Huxley, touted by the band as the "first collaboration of its kind between artists in different planes of existence."

Next up, the Billboard Music Awards, where the band shares the bill with acts like BTS and Pink. This album cycle, apparent grabs for younger listeners have been accompanied by an array of physical products like colored vinyl aimed squarely at its target audience. 

This time out, Duran Duran seems to be truly straddling the line between its future and its past.

At top, "Future Past" album artwork (Tape Modern/BMG)

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