Four Year Strong
Brain Pain


4.5
superb

Review

by iChuckles USER (31 Reviews)
February 28th, 2020 | 77 replies


Release Date: 2020 | Tracklist

Review Summary: "...I've always been the one to stick around".

It's tough to approach discussing new music by Four Year Strong without coming off as biased and hyperbolic, considering they just so happen to be my favorite band of all time. 2010's Enemy of The World was the album that made me want to pursue double-bass drumming, and as far that deplorable subgenre (you know which one) is concerned, you'd be hard pressed to find an album that rivals the gargantuan hooks, angsty lyricism, to-die-for riffs and overall fun factor that was that album – shy of Set Your Goals' superb This Will Be The Death of Us that came out the preceding year. It's been ten years since Four Year Strong dropped the definitive pop-punk album of the summer and five years since their return to form with their excellent self-titled album.

Alas, Four Year Strong has a handful of duds in their discography as well; ranging from a misfired attempt at reaching mainstream success and a ho-hum cover record that did little to appease fans, making it tough to know exactly what to make of a Four Year Strong album in 2020, now that the subgenre they helped popularize has all but vanished alongside many of their contemporaries. How fitting then that Brain Pain feels like a new-found florescence of the band and the genre as a whole, seeing how it's brimming with the same excitement and vigorous, youthful energy that made their earlier outings so entertaining. From the first seconds of opener "It's Cool", the guitars are set to stun, front and center and never wavering in quality or intensity. From there, Brain Pain is an album back-loaded with quotable hooks and a rhythm section that borders on earth-shattering – easily the heaviest bass and drum work courtesy of Joe Weiss and Jake Massucco, respectively, of any Four Year Strong album.

The dual-pronged guitar and vocal attack of front men Alan Day and Dan O' Connor is on full display as well, showcased on all 12 songs, with the most memorable riffs finding their home on the aforementioned opener, as well as "Get Out of My Head" and the mosh-primed "Usefully Useless" and "Mouth Full of Dirt". The albums few surprises come in the form of unusually heavy moments; no doubt the product of opting for renowned metal & hardcore producer Will Putney. "Crazy Pills" is an absolute wall of sound in the best possible way, bordering on full-on heavy metal. Elsewhere, the slightly clichéd but all too catchy "Seventeen" sees the band reflecting on their youth in a gleeful, bittersweet manner with all the swaggering riffs to back it up. Lyrically, the band has finally strayed away from the tiring mantra of "taking on the world", being "at the top of the world", or being an "enemy of the world", in favoring of questioning their own sanity and mental health amidst setbacks and grievances. It's a step forward for a band that has rarely taken many risks in the lyrical department, even if it occasionally still falls into cheesy territory.

Brain Pain is a record that encapsulates the glory days of when melding pop-punk with melodic hardcore was considered "cool", all while tapping into the core strengths of Four Year Strong as band. It's uncompromising in its intensity and catchiness, all while remaining a fitting evolution of their sound with subtle nuances in their song writing, coupled with top-notch production values. There's still no other comparable band out there with riffs and hooks this moment-to-moment entertaining and although I'd hesitate to call it their finest effort to date, it's at the very least the best album they could've made at this point in their lifespan – squishing any misconceptions that a two-decade long career had taken its toll on the Worcester quartet. More than anything, Four Year Strong's latest excursion is a hell-of-a-good time and a valiant effort to remind the world why they were so fun in the first place.

Standout Tracks:
It's Cool
Crazy Pills
Learn To Love The Lie
Mouth Full of Dirt
Seventeen
Usefully Useless



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user ratings (156)
3.5
great

Comments:Add a Comment 
TheTripP
February 28th 2020


4497 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Great review, it's good to see a band like this still be able to thrive!

Atari
Staff Reviewer
February 28th 2020


27952 Comments

Album Rating: 3.7

Nice review. The singles were very solid so I’m excited to jam this

Kompys2000
Emeritus
February 28th 2020


9428 Comments


Enjoying this so far, Pure Noise is doing lots of good work lately.

iChuckles
February 28th 2020


671 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Thanks everyone! ^ definitely Kompys, many artists on their label keep putting out 4-4.5 albums haha.

dedex
Staff Reviewer
February 28th 2020


12785 Comments

Album Rating: 2.8 | Sound Off

Very cool review, have a pos. Nice to see some love for Enemy of the World, this album still pumps me up. Will check this asap and hope it lives up to the hype.

onionbubs
February 28th 2020


20727 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

i dig this a lot, but damn is this definitely the worst putney production job ive heard

Odal
Staff Reviewer
February 28th 2020


1998 Comments


Great review! I absolutely agree with this so far. I'm still on my first spin but this is easily the most inspired they've sounded in a decade

iChuckles
February 28th 2020


671 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

"Nice to see some love for Enemy of the World, this album still pumps me up".



Dude same, that record has aged shockingly well.



"i dig this a lot, but damn is this definitely the worst putney production job ive heard".



I like it a lot, the sole exception being that the vocals are waaay too low in the mix, the guitars drown them out too much.

Kompys2000
Emeritus
February 28th 2020


9428 Comments


I'm a little iffy on some of the more metalcore-ish parts, I like their heavier, riffier take on pop punk but there are a few moments where I feel they could have dialled it back a bit

madrigal30
February 28th 2020


1583 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

i don't like easycore and i love this

onionbubs
February 28th 2020


20727 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

"I like it a lot, the sole exception being that the vocals are waaay too low in the mix, the guitars drown them out too much."



the opening track is definitely the worst offender of that yeah it really distracted me on first listen which took away from how overall sick it is



its not awful but for his standards and especially for this band who's appeal largely comes from vocal melodies it's a bit disappointed. still really into this overall though

mynameischan
Staff Reviewer
February 28th 2020


2406 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I've never been able to get into these guys before. But this is real good

iChuckles
February 28th 2020


671 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

^ Glad to hear it!

AsleepInTheBack
Staff Reviewer
February 28th 2020


10114 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Welp, you got me hyped. And that's not happened in a while for me for a four year strong record.

iChuckles
February 28th 2020


671 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

You'll be pleased to know this is very much a FYS record through and through :]

JesperL
Staff Reviewer
February 28th 2020


5453 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

this is so damn fun, might actually be the best thing they've ever put out

WatchItExplode
February 29th 2020


10453 Comments


Tight af. Fun af. Formulaic af. Solid 3.5.

SymbolicInTime
February 29th 2020


7380 Comments


Makes me hopeful that only one of the singles is in your standouts. Really wasnt a fan of them, tho I do generally enjoy these guys. Will prob check this eventually

SonofSnow
February 29th 2020


1818 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

Peters out pretty hard at the end eh?

SonofSnow
February 29th 2020


1818 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

Peters out pretty hard at the end eh?



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