It also doesn't help when a vital part of the band has been missing for a while now. Drummer Steve Hewitt made up a whole third of the group and was responsible for the fierce, exciting rhythms that powered their bad tempered bursts of rage. When he went, the band's edge went too. Hewitt is now a member of the rejuvenated Six By Seven, who released a fine LP in 'Love And Peace And Sympathy' a few months ago. That's more than could be said for his old musical colleagues, whose decline continues with this poor collection of lifeless flops.
The opening title track from 'Loud Like Love' is a promising number let down by a sound that comes across like a poor man's Biffy Clyro. Why does everything sound so clean? They sound like they've been neutered. 'Scene Of The Crime' begins. This is more like it. It sounds good. The chorus comes in and it's not quite as strong as expected, but there's still hope. Then they pile more synths on top, sounding disturbingly like Linkin Park (or some other shitty manufactured American kiddie-rock act), the sound swells up and then deflates. What a let down. When the clumsy critique of internet social media that is 'Too Many Friends' begins with the line "my computer thinks I'm gay, I threw that piece of junk away", it just makes you want to reach for the skip button. You may as well too, since the rest of the song is far from essential. 'Hold On To Me' is quite possibly the most unimaginative thing they've ever recorded, while 'Exit Wounds' is the sort of sad self parody that makes you wonder why they haven't packed it in by now.
They once boasted that they'd "left a trail of blood sweat and spunk across the country". By subjecting venues around the UK to these songs, all they'll be doing is leaving a trail of shit. "Now I feel I've lost my spark" he sings on the crushingly dull ''. Well at least he admits it. 3/10