Introspection never has been required from
Billy Idol or even desired; he designed his stardom not to bother with such messiness as recognizable human emotions. Nevertheless, a veteran rocker with nearly four decades of experience behind him only has so many cards left to play, so it does makes sense that
Idol devoted 2014 to a double-barrel blast of autobiography: a memoir naturally called
Dancing with Myself paired with an album called
Kings & Queens of the Underground. Confessions are bellowed throughout
Kings & Queens but it never feels like they've been pushed to the forefront, not with
Trevor Horn's production creating a glassy arena rock cocoon.
Horn cannily cherrypicks elements from
Billy's past, reaching something of an apex on "Postcards from the Past," where the rhythm of "White Wedding" is cleverly spliced with the roar of "Rebel Yell," but oddly, he also doesn't neglect such lowlights as the overloaded
Cyberpunk, giving
Kings & Queens a curiously cacophonous feel that doesn't necessarily jibe with
Idol's soul-mining. Then again,
Billy doesn't really throw himself into autobiography here, preferring to merely write from the perspective of an old punk rocker on the verge of senior citizenship. Frankly, that's enough to give
Kings & Queen of the Underground character if not quite a kick.
Idol may be posturing -- that's what he does for a living, after all -- but he's relaxed here, certainly more so than he was on 2005's hard-edged
Devil's Playground, having fun playing with his past while trying on some new fashions. Some of the styles are undeniably tacky but, hey, bad taste is part of
Idol's legacy and
Kings & Queens of the Underground touches upon that garishness along with his exaggerated swagger, fondness for hooks, and an irascible snarl, and that makes it an autobiography even if it never tells a story. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine