 | Tracklist: 1. Underclass Hero
2. Walking Disaster
3. Speak of the Devil
4. Dear Father (Complete Unknown)
5. Count Your Last Blessings
6. Ma Poubelle
7. March of the Dogs
8. The Jester
9. With Me
10. Pull the Curtain
11. King of Contradiction
12. Best of Me
13. Confusion and Frustration in Modern Times
14. So Long, Good Bye
15. Look at Me (Hidden Track)
| Ranking: #175 for 2007 | |
| | other reviews | Mike Stagno STAFF (3.5) Sum 41 returns to its poppier roots and manages to craft a fun, enjoyable album.... | Steven McMahan (2.5) Rivaled only by Minutes to Midnight as the biggest disappointment of 2007, Sum 41 return to the pop ... |
On 5 Lists
|
| Summary: Painted the album as a faster, punker American Idiot, the reality is that the music is inoffensive and overproduced, and the political posturing is comical at best. |
Everybody’s played them. You know those puzzles you do as a child where you’re given two seemingly identical pictures and asked to circle the alleged “differences.” The differences can be as blatant or as difficult to find as the puzzle-maker’s meanness will allow, but the one thread which runs through them all is that the final, most subtle discrepancy always appears to be designed specifically to fuck your little five-year old brain up and get you sent to bed early. The puzzles hinge on the brain’s tendency to present things as they should be rather than as they truly are; the brain obscures the differences so that it actually becomes a physical strain to recognise what’s completely obvious- that the damn picture of a boat on the wall is hilariously crooked in the second picture- and it only seems to become more difficult with age.
Sum 41’s fifth album Underclass Hero is essentially a more elaborate play on the same cheap trick, recycling ideas from their back catalogue, from other bands' catalogues and, impressively, successive songs from the same album. Lead single ‘Underclass Hero’ more or less borrows the guitar riff from 2001’s breakthrough single ‘Fat Lip,’ albeit with less rhythmic variation, and closely follows the half-rapped verse, ultra-melodic chorus blueprint it established. The former and ‘March Of The Dogs,’ the other pre-release teaser, are transparent attempts to ride the coattails of Green Day’s American Idiot (despite Chuck having been released in the interim), though with little of that band’s instinctive vitality and none of their inventiveness. The entire pre-release campaign appears to be have been designed to paint the album as a faster, punker American Idiot, yet the reality is anything but: the music is inoffensive and overproduced, and the political posturing is comical at best.
Frontman Deryck Whibley’s announcement that “[I’ll never] become a victim of your conformity” (‘Fat Lip’) seemed cute at the time; half-way through 2007, with the peak of anti-Bushism three years behind us, Deryck Whibley’s self-appointment as the Underclass’s “hero at large” is either really good or really bad satire- either way, it's not particularly convincing. ‘March Of The Dogs’ and ‘Confusion And Frustration In Modern Times’ operate along similar lines, the former closing with one of the most cringe-worthy eight lines in modern music: eight rhyming lines ending with ‘-ed,’ more reminiscent of a scene from Happy Gilmore than a serious political statement.. Similarly clumsy are ‘Dear Father’ and ‘Walking Disaster,’ a pair of demon-exorcising ballads aimed at Whibley’s absentee father; recycling a single vocal melody, lyrically, they’re deeply felt but totally inept. The singer seems more concerned with maintaining the rhyming scheme than actually making any sense.
While Underclass Hero isn’t completely bankrupt of originality like, for instance, Good Charlotte’s Good Morning Revival, it not as well-executed as the Madden Brothers’ latest foray into the world of plagiarism. Underclass Hero tries its best to be profound and musically challenging, however its only success is found, without exception, in the tracks which drop the pretense entirely and return to the formula which made the group popular to begin with. ‘King Of The Contradiction’ recalls vintage Green Day with razor sharp bass and guitar riffs and telephone-line distortion- there’s even a brief appearance of ska-lite horns. ‘Count Your Blessings’ and ‘Speak Of The Devil’ hint at the heavy metal influence almost entirely excised with the departure of lead guitarist Dave “Brownsound” Baksh last year. Surprisingly, the best song on the disc clocks in below a minute; the poppy, folky French-language number ‘Ma Poubelle’ is reminiscent of The Beatles’ ‘Michelle,’ only lewder and, by extension, more authentically French.
|
| Recent reviews by this author | | | |
Really that bad, Plath?
| | | Album Rating: 3.5
Wow you just beat me out...
I like this though
Digging: Tegan and Sara - Sainthood | | | The single off this was bad, and I figured the album would be bad, but I definitley didn't expect you to give it a one. I'd be surprised if I ever listen to this, despite enjoying All Killer No Filler at one point in life.
Review is good, of course.
| | | I liked Chuck, that was one of the most well-done Pop-Punk albums I had.
| | | Album Rating: 3
This comes as a shock. Chuck to me was a near perfect slice of pop-punk.
I guess it answers my question if post-"Brownsound" would be any good.
Digging: Bon Jovi - Crossroad | | | Score doesn't surprise me considering their main songwriter left.
Digging: The Orb - U.F.Orb
| | | Album Rating: 3 | Sound Off
Is this review a joke? All those run-on sentences made this review a tedious read.
Digging: Closure in Moscow - The Penance and the Patience | | | Album Rating: 1
What run-on sentences? :confused:
Digging: Natasha Bedingfield - Pocketful of Sunshine | | | Album Rating: 3 | Sound Off
"‘King Of The Contradiction’ recalls vintage Green Day with razor sharp bass and guitar riffs and telephone-line distortion- there’s even a brief appearance of ska-lite horns- and ‘Count Your Blessings’ and ‘Speak Of The Devil’ hint at the heavy metal influence almost entirely excised with the departure of lead guitarist Dave “Brownsound” Baksh last year."
To give one example.
| | | if the album is that horrible why did you buy it and go to the trouble of writing a review.. jeez it cant really be that bad can it?
| | | Album Rating: 1
To give one example.
That's broken up a little clumsily but it's not a run-on sentence by any definition.
I broke up a couple of sentences, hopefully it reads a little more smoothly now.This Message Edited On 07.21.07
| | |
if the album is that horrible why did you buy it and go to the trouble of writing a review.. jeez it cant really be that bad can it? ummm...ever hear of negative reviews?
Digging: DJ Shadow - Endtroducing
| | | Most entertaining review I've read in a long time. Great great work.
Digging: Electric Wizard - Dopethrone
| | | great review dude.
Digging: A Place to Bury Strangers - Exploding Head
| | |
if the album is that horrible why did you buy it and go to the trouble of writing a review.. jeez it cant really be that bad can it?
Nowadays, you can DOWNLOAD albums from your COMPUTER and listen to them. And like Syngates said, "Porkchop", there is a such thing as a negative review.
| | | Hmm I doubt it is truly this bad but the single was dissapointing it sounded like a complete rip-off of the earlier stuff except without any hooks.
Digging: Miniature Tigers - Tell It To The Volcano
| | | Album Rating: 2
NIIIce Review
I completely agreeThis Message Edited On 07.21.07
| | | Album Rating: 3.5
i do understand your points but the album is still entertaining though it may lack originality
anyway i agree with mikesn's review a bit more but you do show your problem with this album quite well
well a 1 is still very harsh, i will listen to it a bit more before rating it
| | | wait so we can't have an opinion on how bad this review is
I DEMAND RETRIBUTION
Anyway, Chuck had it's moments, but they were too metallica to be quite honest. This seems to Green Day, so I may buy it.
Digging: Giant Squid - The Ichthyologist
| | | The cd is awesome thus far.
They are back to their All Killer style, and it's just loud fun music.
Good cd so far.
| | | |
|
|