Midnight Boom
Midnight Boom is the third studio album by the English-American indie rock duo The Kills, released on 10 March 2008 through Domino Recording Company.[1] Consisting of vocalist Alison Mosshart and guitarist Jamie Hince, the band recorded the album at Key Club Recording Company in Benton Harbor, Michigan, drawing inspiration from late-night sessions that informed its title, referring to the period from midnight to 6 a.m.[2] The 12-track album blends genres including pop, glam, blues, art-punk, and hip-hop, characterized by a raw attitude that shifts between light and dark tones, humor and morbidity, and experimentation with accessibility.[3][4] The album marks a significant evolution for The Kills, formed in 2000 in London, following their previous releases Keep on Your Mean Side (2003) and No Wow (2005), both also on Domino.[5] Produced with a focus on organic fusion and studio experimentation, Midnight Boom features standout tracks such as "U.R.A. Fever", "Cheap and Cheerful", and "Tape Song", which highlight the duo's minimalist yet energetic sound built around Mosshart's powerful vocals and Hince's distorted guitar riffs.[4] With a total runtime of approximately 34 minutes, it received acclaim for its concise energy and stylistic versatility, solidifying The Kills' place in the indie rock scene.[6] Notable for its garage rock revival influences alongside indie elements, Midnight Boom was issued in various formats including CD, vinyl, and digital, with multiple international editions.[4] The album's production emphasized beats and live instrumentation, capturing the band's don't-care swagger while exploring themes of love, excess, and urban nightlife.[7]Background and recording
Background
The Kills are an indie rock duo formed in 2000 by American singer Alison Mosshart and British musician Jamie Hince after they met in London, where Mosshart had relocated following the disbandment of her previous punk band, Discount.[5] Mosshart handles lead vocals, while Hince contributes guitar, backing vocals, and production, creating a minimalist sound centered on their interplay without additional band members or extensive instrumentation.[8] The duo's formation stemmed from exchanging cassette recordings across the Atlantic, blending Mosshart's raw punk influences with Hince's bluesy guitar style to establish their signature garage rock aesthetic.[9] Midnight Boom serves as The Kills' third studio album, succeeding their 2003 debut Keep on Your Mean Side and the 2005 follow-up No Wow, the latter of which introduced a more refined production approach compared to the lo-fi rawness of their initial release.[10] Released in 2008, it represented a continuation of the band's evolution, building on the polished edges honed in No Wow while preserving the intimate duo dynamic that defined their work.[11] The album's title originated from the duo's most fertile creative periods, which occurred during late-night hours from midnight to 6 a.m., a time Mosshart described as the "glory time of creativity and secrecy" during the writing process.[12] These sessions, often extending into the early morning, fostered a surge of ideas that Hince likened to a creative "boom," capturing the secretive and intense atmosphere of their collaboration.[13] Development of the album commenced in 2006 and continued through 2007, as the pair sought to broaden their sound beyond the raw garage rock roots of earlier efforts, incorporating subtle expansions like rhythmic influences from playground chants while retaining the core intimacy of their two-person setup.[11] This period involved writing multiple iterations of material amid personal and logistical challenges, including financial strains that prompted temporary relocation to Mexico.[12]Recording
The recording of Midnight Boom took place primarily in 2007 at Key Club Recording Company in Benton Harbor, Michigan, following an aborted attempt in Los Angeles where the initial producer was dismissed after four days.[14][15] The duo of Alison Mosshart and Jamie Hince handled primary production duties, with additional production, electronic beats, and drum programming contributed by Alex Epton (known as XXXChange or Armani XXXChange) during the final ten days of sessions.[16][14] The sessions employed a minimal setup centered on Hince's guitar, Mosshart's vocals, and programmed drums via drum machines and samplers, marking the band's first use of computer-based recording to integrate organic and synthetic elements.[14][16] This approach allowed for a sparse, lo-fi foundation that blended the duo's raw live energy with studio enhancements.[13] Spanning six to eight months overall, the process involved writing around 40 songs before refining the final 12 tracks, with emphasis on capturing honest performances augmented by subtle effects and edits.[14] Some tracks, such as "Tape Song" and "Sour Cherry," incorporated engineering from additional studios in Los Angeles and New York for specific elements.[16]Composition
Musical style
Midnight Boom is primarily classified as indie rock and garage rock, incorporating elements of blues, glam, and hip-hop influences through its production choices.[17][11] The album draws from 1960s garage rock traditions, evident in its raw, overdriven sound, while art-punk sensibilities add an edgy, minimalist structure reminiscent of influences like the Velvet Underground and Patti Smith.[11] Hip-hop elements emerge via programmed drum machines and beats crafted by producer Alex "XXXChange" Epton, blending sleazy rock with rhythmic grooves.[18] Bluesy undertones infuse the tracks with a gritty, seductive tension, creating a sonic palette that balances light, playful motifs against darker, brooding atmospheres.[17][19] Key sonic features include Jamie Hince's raw, staccato guitar riffs that deliver primitive, cheekbone-sharp aggression, paired with Alison Mosshart's sultry, drawling vocals that evoke a temptress-like allure.[17][11][19] Programmed beats by XXXChange provide a sozzled, vintage drum machine backbone, enhancing the album's beat-heavy foundation and introducing danceable rhythms, particularly in "Cheap and Cheerful."[17][18] This mix generates dynamic tension through contrasts, such as the slinky backbeats and purring bass in opener "U.R.A. Fever," which channels raw garage energy.[17] Subtle multi-tracking and inventive drum programming add layers without overwhelming the core minimalism, as heard in the psychedelic edges of "Black Balloon," where Mosshart's ethereal delivery heightens the moody interplay.[11] Clocking in at 34:07 across 12 tracks, Midnight Boom marks an evolution from the stark minimalism of the duo's prior album No Wow, embracing more layered production while retaining a taut, visceral edge.[20] The shift incorporates electro-tinged elements and fuller vocal characterizations, allowing for blistering choruses and dynamic shifts that amplify the album's stylish, sexy simplicity.[17] Drum programming techniques, refined during recording, contribute to this polished yet dangerous sound.[11]Lyrics
The lyrics of Midnight Boom delve into themes of desire, addiction, urban nightlife, and fleeting relationships, conveyed through abstract, poetic imagery that contrasts dark subject matter with playful, chant-like structures inspired by 1960s playground rhymes.[21][14] These elements draw from gritty, real-life observations, such as paranoia and loneliness in tracks like "Last Day of Magic," which echoes Dostoevsky's themes of isolation.[21] The songwriting process was a close collaboration between vocalist Alison Mosshart and guitarist Jamie Hince, who contributed lyrics together after a period of creative struggle across locations like Michigan and Mexico; Mosshart often led on vocal phrasing, while Hince added instrumental cues to shape the words.[21][14] For instance, "Sour Cherry" captures seduction through its teasing, rope-skipping rhythm and lines evoking feverish attraction, while "Tape Song" uses coy insinuations about memory and transience to build to an explosive chorus on loss.[21][17] Vocal interplay between Mosshart and Hince emphasizes duality, with alternating leads, chanted duets, and harmonies that heighten tension—Mosshart's delivery shifts from raw croons to shrieks, creating a conversational urgency over sparse beats.[17][21] The overall tone blends hedonistic energy with underlying melancholy, mirroring the album's title as a reference to late-night creative bursts amid personal and artistic turmoil.[17][14]Release and promotion
Singles
The lead single from Midnight Boom, "U.R.A. Fever", was released on December 3, 2007, available in 7" vinyl and digital formats.[22] A music video for the track, directed by Sophie Muller, featured stark black-and-white visuals that captured the album's raw, nocturnal aesthetic. "Cheap and Cheerful" followed as the second single, with a digital release on February 25, 2008, and physical CD and 7" formats on March 3, 2008.[23] Its accompanying music video, also directed by Sophie Muller, emphasized themes of urban grit and intimacy through dynamic, high-contrast imagery.[24] The third single, "Last Day of Magic", was issued on June 15, 2008, primarily as a digital download and promotional release.[25] Sophie Muller returned to direct its video, incorporating surreal elements that aligned with the album's exploratory mood.[26] "Tape Song" appeared later on November 24, 2008, as a limited-edition 7" vinyl single.[27] The music video, directed by band member Jamie Hince, highlighted lo-fi aesthetics and thematic ties to analog nostalgia central to Midnight Boom.[28] The album's final single, "Black Balloon", was released on March 22, 2009, featuring B-sides including various remixes.[29] Its video, directed by Kenneth Cappello, continued the visual motif of shadowy, ethereal atmospheres reflective of the record's overarching themes.)Promotion
Midnight Boom was released on March 10, 2008, in the United Kingdom and Europe, followed by a United States release on March 17, 2008, through the independent label Domino Recording Company.[30][1] To promote the album, The Kills embarked on an extensive 2008 world tour spanning North America and Europe, including headline shows and festival appearances such as Coachella and Lollapalooza.[31][32] The duo's live performances highlighted their raw, energetic interplay, drawing crowds with stripped-down sets that captured the album's intimate garage rock vibe.[13] Media placements played a key role in the album's visibility, with the track "Sour Cherry" featured in the CW series Gossip Girl during its first season and in the 2008 film The House Bunny.[33][34] Similarly, "What New York Used to Be" appeared in the 2009 science fiction film Push, contributing to broader soundtrack licensing efforts that included television shows like 90210.[35][36] Domino Records supported the release through targeted marketing aimed at indie music audiences, including interviews where band members Alison Mosshart and Jamie Hince discussed the album's creative process and recording in rural settings.[13][37] The label also issued the album on vinyl formats, with subsequent limited-edition reissues underscoring its enduring appeal among collectors.[30][38]Commercial performance
Chart performance
Midnight Boom achieved moderate commercial success upon its release, charting in several countries primarily within Europe and North America. In the United Kingdom, the album debuted and peaked at number 47 on the Official Albums Chart, spending a total of two weeks in the top 200.[39] It also topped the Official Independent Albums Chart for one week and remained on that chart for nine weeks overall.[40] In the United States, Midnight Boom marked the band's first entry on the Billboard 200, where it peaked at number 133.[5] It performed stronger on genre-specific charts, reaching number 7 on the Top Independent Albums chart and number 1 on the Heatseekers Albums chart.[5] The album stayed on the Top Independent Albums chart for 12 weeks.[41] The album also charted in other European territories, peaking at number 23 on the French Albums Chart and spending 21 weeks there. In Belgium's Flanders region, it reached number 37 on the Ultratop Albums Chart. It attained number 46 on the Portuguese Albums Chart, with minor peaks in Germany (number 85), Ireland (number 65), the Netherlands (number 67), and Switzerland (number 94).[42]| Country | Chart | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Official Albums Chart | 47 | 2 |
| United States | Billboard 200 | 133 | - |
| United States | Top Independent Albums | 7 | 12 |
| United States | Heatseekers Albums | 1 | - |
| France | French Albums Chart | 23 | 21 |
| Belgium (Flanders) | Ultratop Albums | 37 | - |
| Portugal | Portuguese Albums | 46 | - |
| Germany | German Albums | 85 | - |
| Ireland | Irish Albums | 65 | - |
| Netherlands | Dutch Albums | 67 | - |
| Switzerland | Swiss Albums | 94 | - |
Sales and certifications
Midnight Boom achieved modest commercial success as an independent release, earning a silver certification in Europe for sales exceeding 30,000 units.[44] The album did not receive any certifications from the RIAA in the United States, reflecting its niche appeal within the indie rock market. Over time, it has maintained steady catalog sales through Domino Records, with continued visibility boosted by soundtrack placements such as the track "Cheap and Cheerful" in the video game NHL 09.[45]Critical reception
Initial reception
Upon its release in March 2008, Midnight Boom garnered generally favorable reviews from contemporary critics. The album earned a Metacritic aggregate score of 75 out of 100, based on 31 reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception overall.[46] Pitchfork rated it 6.8 out of 10, commending the record's "stylish, sexy, and simple" approach to nouveau-garage clatter, which masterfully balanced raw energy with inventive simplicity.[17] Similarly, PopMatters awarded it 8 out of 10, emphasizing the duo's sexy, raw energy that infused the tracks with an irresistible, primal edge.[11] Common praises across reviews focused on Alison Mosshart's commanding vocals and Jamie Hince's jagged riffs, which drove standout hits like "Sour Cherry," often cited for its infectious, tongue-in-cheek swagger; critics saw these elements as key to the album's breakthrough in broadening the band's accessibility without diluting their core intensity.[11] However, some critiques were mixed, pointing to the album's incorporation of poppier elements—such as drum machine grooves and R&B influences—as a departure from the rawer minimalism of prior works like No Wow, potentially limiting its appeal to newcomers. For example, Drowned in Sound noted that Midnight Boom was unlikely to win over a broad new audience, though it solidified the band's strengths for existing fans.[13]Retrospective assessments
In 2023, Domino Recording Company released a 15th anniversary edition of Midnight Boom on limited transparent blue vinyl, restricted to 1,000 copies, underscoring the album's status as a cornerstone of indie rock. This reissue highlighted the record's fusion of pop, glam, blues, art-punk, and hip-hop elements, balancing light and dark tones in a way that continues to resonate with listeners. The limited pressing renewed appreciation for its production, originally overseen by Armani XXXChange, and its role in elevating The Kills to wider acclaim. Retrospective analyses frequently position Midnight Boom as The Kills' commercial breakthrough, marking a shift toward more accessible songwriting while retaining their raw edge, and influencing subsequent garage rock revival acts through its stripped-down intensity and rhythmic drive. Tracks like "U.R.A. Fever" have demonstrated lasting cultural impact, featuring in the 2010 film The Losers during key scenes, which helped sustain the album's visibility in media and playlists long after its debut. Publications such as Pitchfork described its "nouveau-garage clatter" as magnificently balancing base and brilliant elements, contributing to its inclusion in various "best of 2000s indie rock" compilations that celebrate its energetic blend of raw aggression and polished hooks.[17] The album's legacy also extends to its subtle disruption of gender norms in rock, with the duo's dynamic—led by Alison Mosshart's assertive vocals and stage presence—challenging male-dominated conventions and inspiring female-fronted acts in the genre. Mosshart has emphasized the absence of gender barriers in their creative process, positioning The Kills as pioneers in a boy-girl partnership where power is equally distributed. No significant controversies surround its influence, but it remains a benchmark for indie duos navigating tension between intimacy and intensity.Credits and personnel
Track listing
The standard edition of Midnight Boom contains 12 tracks, all written by Jamie Hince and Alison Mosshart of The Kills.[47]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | U.R.A. Fever | 2:16 |
| 2 | Cheap and Cheerful | 2:26 |
| 3 | Tape Song | 3:35 |
| 4 | Getting Down | 2:55 |
| 5 | Last Day of Magic | 3:21 |
| 6 | Hook and Line | 2:03 |
| 7 | Black Balloon | 3:46 |
| 8 | M.E.X.I.C.O. | 1:37 |
| 9 | Sour Cherry | 3:05 |
| 10 | Alphabet Pony | 1:47 |
| 11 | What New York Used to Be | 3:00 |
| 12 | Goodnight Bad Morning | 3:50 |