Let's face it. You can not get eight albums cling long to the exact same genre. Whoever accepts and with little openness goes about "Turn Blue" finds it a great album of a great band that just a little differently comes than their debut. Of course you will not find Thickfreakness or Countdown to Turn Blue, but why would you want that too? The opener Weight Of Love sets at the beginning with Around 7 minutes ago tidy. The chorus sounds sometimes a bit by Broken Bells, one half of Danger Mouse, the Black Keys albums so now produced for years. The whole is mixed towards the end with extravagant guitar solos sound gradually. Throughout the album the songs sound a bit smoother and more accessible than on the previous albums, but this does not detract from the listening experience in itself. The first single Fever, for example, has an extremely oblique synth line in the intro and chorus, which is so catchy that it gets bad the song again from the ear. While this may be badly getting used to, especially for fans of the older albums, but makes the repeated listening fun. In general, the Black Keys put here more than a synthesizer or piano on all the other albums, but to leave without it thereby dominate the songs. In almost all songs that works pretty well. On its own, the shrill tones in 10 Lovers would probably sound terrible, but are perfectly incorporated here in the song. In itself, therefore, a thoroughly good album that new ventures without removing too far from the typical Black Keys Sound. Whether the whole live without production, is still as good sounds to be seen.