Foo Fighters’ last outing, 2023’s But Here We Are, was a cathartic record, stung by grief and loss, while at the same time shot through with a golden nostalgia for better days. If there had been wonderings as to the future of the band following the tragic death of Taylor Hawkins, it was a vital response. What else, after all, is Dave Grohl gonna do?
While the heart of that record was clear and obvious and there for all to see, all the better to navigate such a maze of emotions, Your Favorite Toy will have many trying to piece various bits and pieces into the recent gossip about Dave’s life. You will hit an ambiguous dead end. Which doesn’t really matter, because this is an album that frequently finds Foos bursting with the energy they only really hit at their best.
This is in part down to a tangible, no fuss, ‘plug and play’ approach. There’s a scrappy, back-to-basics sensibility in Caught In The Echo, or the speedy, punky Spit Shine and Of All People. When they go fast, it sounds like they’re rushing giddily toward the chorus. On the less wild stuff, you can almost physically feel the groove, a natural vibe.
Window locks into a simple riff and groove that sounds like you’re in the room by the amps, before revealing an enormous alt.rock chorus. Unconditional and Amen, Caveman are classic Foos, the latter a full-on ‘do the chorus, then do it with double-time drums at the end’ stuff that fits like an old cardigan, while still toying with an almost post-punk middle and tang of Killing Joke (squint a bit) in the guitar harmonies. On Unconditional, it’s a proper ’90s indie-rock banger, locked-in by new drummer Ilan Rubin’s clockwork, straight beat.