Tomorrow the five-year wait is over. Finally the Red Hot Chili Peppers will draw the disk happens to I'm With You. Just over a month ago the group released the first of three songs made public.
"Dark Necessities" not displeased. It is a piece that seems to penetrate to those early funk band, but no. A piano gives a lunge that takes the song to other areas. Flea bass stands in contrast to the lessened guitar Josh Klinghoffer, who despite doing a good job with the instrument for more than five years ago, still fails to evoke the great moments achieved by John Frusciante in the group. The piano gives a faint lunge.
In the recent edition of Rock Am Ring in Germany they interpreted the theme, good performance with good reception among the public. The same happened with "The Getaway" where the guitar creates other atmospheres collated with the bass. The composition however is more like what he sought with his previous production.
A few days ago we premiered "We Turn Red" which begins with a battery reminiscent of Led Zeppelin and then decant in a funk guitar that dominates much of the time. Both the first issue like this seem to indicate a trend that will be on the disc: flirtations with the roots of the band with long paragraphs that remind the slower parts of By The Way (2002).
Although all three songs are good, it could not be said to become classics of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. For now, they have only served to increase the expectation. Nothing else.