
Franz Ferdinand is back with their second album "You Could Have it so Much Better," the follow-up to their smash 2004 self-titled debut. After more than a year spent on the road behind their breakthrough you might expect the members of Franz Ferdinand to feel a little frayed around the edges. But if You Could Have It So Much Better was supposed to be a bloated sophomore album focusing on bad airline meals and cold hotel swimming pools, somebody forgot to tell the Mercury Music Prize winning Scottish quartet. Instead, the Franzies return with a disc packed with thrilling punk-pop treatises like the single "Do You Want To," political rabble-rousers such as opener "The Fallen," and lovely psychedelic ballads that explore the common ground between the Beatles and Bowie, like "Eleanor Put You Boots On" (about Eleanor Freidberger of the Fiery Furnaces, no less). It's a stunning, confident piece of work that suggests the band is merely getting started.
This Scottish band has found their niche, but the future remains to be seen as to how they will grow and change if they hope to survive. To me, their first and second albums are interchangeable, but also solid work.
# wj is a contributing author