When
Tool frontman
Maynard James Keenan covered
Wings'
"Silly Love Songs" as a guest vocalist for
the Replicants, it was amusing and well thought out. When
Tool covered
"No Quarter" in concert it was intense, appropriate, and staggeringly good. And when
Maynard continued the tradition with the beautiful recording of
Failure's
"The Nurse Who Loved Me," it became apparent that
Maynard had a penchant for re-recording songs that were of high quality but not necessarily anthems. But then there's the notion of recording a whole album of covers, which immediately sends off red flags that the water may be running dry and the record label is thirsty for a new release.
A Perfect Circle's album of covers,
eMOTIVe, falls flat and fails to raise the bar set so high by the quality of their previous two releases. Turning some of popular music's most potent songs into a soundtrack ideal for background music at your local teen-angst mall-chain clothing store,
A Perfect Circle work their way through 12 songs that would almost be unrecognizable in their current arrangement if one weren't familiar with the original versions of each song.
John Lennon's somber, optimistic anthem for peace,
"Imagine," is changed from its original major key to a funereal minor key dirge.
Marvin Gaye's perfect
"What's Going On" is turned into a horrible
industrial track that would be permissible on a budget-line compilation but is simply unforgivable in its inclusion here. The same could apply to the butchering of
Black Flag's
"Gimmie Gimmie Gimmie" and a few other numbers. However, the album's sole moment of tranquility and its most effective moments lie in the band's treatment of
Led Zeppelin's
"When the Levee Breaks," and the disturbing
a cappella of
Joni Mitchell's
"Fiddle and the Drum." eMOTIVe is a slight dent in the armor of
Maynard's nearly flawless career as a frontman, and it's (hopefully) a mere detour for
A Perfect Circle. ~ Rob Theakston