"HUNGRY LIKE THE WOLF" MUSE (2019)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

In the past 20 years, the 80’s have made quite the comeback. The decade’s sound was prominent in bands like The Killers, The Bravery and Franz Ferdinand. Then later, 80’s covers started going from nostalgic filler to new musical dimensions from some of most established artists around. Weezer’s “Africa” and Johnny Cash’s “Personal Jesus” come to mind. But Muse’s lesser-known rendition of Duran Duran’s “Hungry Like the Wolf” also caught my attention recently on Spotify.

The original was utterly infectious and highly emblematic of the decade. It was all about those juicy instrumental elements. Nick Rhodes’ celestial syynthesizer swirls. Andy Taylor’s laser-sharp guitar riffs. John Taylor’s octave leaping bass lines. Rather than turn the song upside down, Muse took all the likable elements and simply turned them up a notch, giving each instrument a little more sonic edge. It’s predictable in the sense that this is Muse in its comfort zone, but the most unpredictable aspect of the track is the song selection itself.

“Darken the city, night is a wire. Steam in the subway, earth is afire.”