With the 1990 departure of
Robert Gotobed (now Robert Grey),
Wire ceased to exist, becoming the trio
WIR. A decade later, however, the unpredictable foursome reunited for a series of concerts. Playing together again, the bandmembers realized
Wire still had something to say. Tracks from 1999 rehearsals appeared on The Third Day, but the band began recording completely new material in late 2001. That first studio collaboration since
Manscape resulted in
Read & Burn 01. It's appropriate that this release from British punk's most innovative band should coincide with punk's Silver Jubilee. But although
Read & Burn 01 evokes the taut and abrasive, pared-down rush of
Pink Flag -- before the more experimental departures of
Chairs Missing and
154 -- this isn't empty nostalgia. On the vintage foundation of simple, minimal patterns repeated to often-hypnotic effect,
Wire builds a beefed-up, contemporary wall of sound. In keeping with the title, this material is urgent and intense, feelings conveyed by the music's sheer pace. The three-chord wonder "In the Art of Stopping" kicks things off frantically and the band goes into overdrive on the deconstructed speed metal/hardcore onslaught of "Comet," with Grey's characteristically relentless, rigid beat at the center of the sonic maelstrom; aside from
Colin Newman's trademark sneer, this could be an outtake from
Motörhead's
Overkill. Although there's a respite on the shouty "I Don't Understand," with its ominous, lumbering groove recalling "Lowdown," elsewhere
Wire sustains the amphetamine pace. They end with a bang on "The Agfers of Kodack," an assaultive number enveloped in
Bruce Gilbert's swarm-of-bees guitar. During a 1977
Wire gig at London's Roxy, a heckler shouted at the band after every number, "That's better, now louder and faster."
Read & Burn 01 suggests that 25 years later,
Wire might still be hearing that voice egging them on. ~ Wilson Neate