You seem good to have breakfast up there in Ohio, including the band consists of only six eyes, a spectacle frame included. Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney produce such a powerful sound that you would like to question the barren occupation smooth. "Magic Potion" is the fourth album of piano keys, and again, they both come out only with electric guitar and drums.
The relevant ingredients of its breakfast cereals are plentiful Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin and shot up about it a lot Jimi Hendrix. All this awakens then but only with the typical Black Keys-passion for life. Auerbach's raw voice and the lo-fi sound - the perfect cover for finest Urban Blues, perhaps best represented by the single "Your Touch". In desperation, he swallowed most of the words, but they are also not particularly important; the gist "I need your touch" comes over and longing, desire and desire become tangible. The ballad "Youre The One" on the other hand could, played with orchestra, driving even 14 years in love for the first Knutschgelage.
Once again showing a band that was born in the wrong decade. Unlike the much quoted White Stripes Black Keys sit out on the blues track, never turn into the garage and stay on their wavelength. Does the course of plate per se hardly change, so does the genre, and also sufficient. - Frank Schwalm -