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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A different direction, but sounds good. , 20 Jun 2008
I'm writing this review as I listen to the album for the first time, so all you're getting is my first impressions of the songs and a brief summary.
1. Half Truism - A good, chart-friendly, typically Offspring style singalong. Fst punk verses with a half-tempo chorus. Better than average but nothing special.
2. Trust in You - Sounds like the title song from the Smash album. A fast averagely good punk song of the type the Offspring do very well. Think 'The Long Way Home'.
3. You're gonna go far kid - Kind of dancy with a slow dragging chorus. I'm not overly impressed with this song. Puts me in mind of Panic at the Disco.
4. Hammerhead - Starts quite fast and heavy. The lyrics appear to be from a soldiers point of view. Changes 2/3rds through to a half-tempo chord-heavy punk rock number, kind of like the first track from 'Americana' (can't remember the name right now). The lyrics seem to now be about a school shooting, which is odd.
EDIT: Just listened to this song again and I like it very much.
5. A Lot Like Me - This is a totally new style for an Offspring song but I like it alot. This is how every Coldplay song should sound. Very emotional chorus. The song builds very well.
6. Takes Me Nowhere - Energetic up-tempo song. Sounds very much like 'Kick Him When He's Down' from 'Ignition'. In fact, it wouldn't sound out of place on that album.
7. Kristy, Are You Doing Ok? - I really like this song. It starts like a slow Feeder song, which isn't the best compliment, but soon becomes very listenable. Again, a totally different direction for the band. Quite poignant lyrics.
8. Nothingtown - Bouncy up-beat song that sounds like a mix between Less Than Jake's 'History of a Boring Town' and those bouncy 'minority' type songs that Greenday insist on doing. Not very good. I didn't listen to all of this as it got boring very quickly.
9. Stuff Is Messed Up - Hmmm... When this started I thought I was listening to Marylin Manson's 'Beautiful People'. In fact, if it were heavier you could imagine the lanky dead guy himself performing this. Quite good though, in a childish way.
10. Fix You - Starts like Greenday's 'Wake me up when September ends' but thankfully gets alot better. Another one in the new direction they've taken. I'm liking this song quite a bit. It's very emotional. If I didn't know better I'd say it was lifted from a Jimmy Eat World album, and that's no bad thing.
11. Let's Here it For Rock Bottom - Mid-speed rock number with a 'Police' style verse and a full-on rock chorus. Good chart friendly Offspring fodder with a singalong chorus that goes on forever toward the end. Will be a good crowd pleaser when played live.
Bit of an after-thought here: it sounds like Bon Jovi. Don't know what to make of that...
12. Rise and Fall - If this isn't a deliberate satire of Greendays 'American Idiot' then I'll eat my own hair. Even the album artwork that accompanies the song would suggest the similarities are deliberate. A very 'happy' rock song. Would sound good on the radio if they had the guts to play it and endure the inevitable Greenday comparisons.
It really, really does sound like 'American Idiot'.
Conclusion: I very much like this album.
There's no arguing here - they've gone in a very different direction with 'Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace' but, for me at least, it's a good direction. The endless 'Pretty Fly...' crap was starting to get annoying and this doesn't have one song that sounds like that.
I've only given it 4 stars because there are a lot of the die-hard 'Ignition' fans out there who are gonna hate this.
Personally, I think this has a much more mellowed adult feel to it. That's not really something you want from a punk band but in this instance it's worked very well.
If you like Jimmy Eat World, Greenday and 'Denial, Revisited' from Conspiracy of one then you'll like this.
If not, then just put 'Ixnay...' on and wait for the next album. I wouldn't hold your breath though...
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Much different, but its a good thing okay?, 9 Jun 2008
After the awful Splinter and the premature Greatest Hits I was a little worried about what to expect and after the album art was revealed I was even more worried but after just two listens I can say that Dexter and co have produced a cracking album. Yeah its not the hard punk of the past and this is a far cry from ixnay and smash but what it is is a good, solid album with some brilliant tracks that remind you of old offspring and some newer, more mainstream tracks. Offspring have stuck by their roots for a long while and I think this album is a perfection evolution for a band who deserve your respect on the basis of what they have already achieved. If you're a fan then get this, give it some time and accept that, unlike splinter this is the next step in the evolution of one of the best punk bands of the 90's. Yes the Offspring have changed, but its damn good music and thats all that should matter. add it to your sounds of the summer
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Stuff, 11 Jun 2008
premature greatest hits ????? how long do you have to be a band in your eyes then other reviewer? is the offsprings 24 years not enough? This album is great, i have shy'd away from their last 2 albums as they were becoming a little on the desperate side, but this one is a return to form, made me think of americana and ixnay... listen to track 2 'trust in you'.. then jump back to the song 'Smash' from the smash album, very similar. Tracks 2,4 and 5 are standout in my opinion allthough after asking for my sisters opinion, she came back with 7 & 10.. the opening line on track 11 wouldn't sound out of place on a sex pistols record.
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