Broken Social Scene’s “Forgiveness Rock Record” (2010) – The Weekend Review

By Chris Moore:

RATING: 2 / 5 stars

Their concept is an interesting one: record en mass with a crowd of artists whose talents and respective genres run the gamut from classical to avant-garde. When there is cohesion and purpose, the diversity contributes to some fascinating productions.

When Broken Social Scene falls short, though, the distance is vast.

With one exception, Forgiveness Rock Record falls far short of anything approaching complete success past the sixth track.  Which is a shame, because the first six tracks are so fantastic, each finding an order in the chaos of up to fourteen chefs with their hands in the pot.

Songs like “Forced to Love” border on beautiful, hinting at single-worthiness.  Ten years ago, fifteen perhaps, they may have stood a chance on commercial radio.  Consider the quirky catchiness of “Texico Bitches” or the bouncy indie rock of “Art House Director” — these are the standout tracks where, clearly, something special was tapped into.

Even “All to All,” which threatens to stretch out for too long, is a gorgeous piece that walks the line between indie and dance, owing not a little to Lisa Lobsinger’s lead.  When Leslie Feist later unfolds “Sentimental X’s,” it reads as an attempt to mimic “All to All.”  Perhaps this was purposeful, as a means of pulling the otherwise disparate pieces of the album together.

Even still, it falls short.

The opener “World Sick” hints at a truth later revealed:  Broken Social Scene doesn’t always know when to cut it short or rein it in.  On the seven minute “World Sick,” their patient unraveling of the larger concept translates, and they quickly follow up with the fast-paced three-minute “Chase Scene” as a prompt reminder that not every track on Forgiveness Rock Record will be a test of the listener’s patience.  Even as a large group, they know how to hit a groove and run with it.

This is a key aspect present in the first six tracks that disappears almost irretrievably for the remainder of the album.

Broken Social Scene's "Forgiveness Rock Record" (2010)

Broken Social Scene's "Forgiveness Rock Record" (2010)

After “Art House Director” fades, the bulk of the album kicks off with “Highway Slipper Jam,” beginning with a vocal burst that sounds like something Femi Kuti would contribute to a Brett Dennen single.  Whereas it is a fun accompaniment on the latter, it sits oddly in isolation on this seventh track.  It is not so much that “Highway Slipper Jam” is a bad song.  It is more that it is hardly a song at all.  Essentially, this track expresses what is implied by the tag “Jam”: it is little more than a drum beat and some disconnected vocals and guitars.

“Ungrateful Little Father” opens lyrically strong and catchy even, yet dissolves into a more than three minute indulgence that sounds like a dream sequence set in a casino.

From there, most of the remaining tracks either tease at something more or fall apart as echoes of other sounds on the album.  “Meet Me in the Basement” builds up to a legitimate rock song… without any vocals or anything really interesting or fresh after the midpoint about two minutes in.   As noted above, “Sentimental X’s” reads as an inferior six-minute rewrite of “All to All.”

“Sweetest Kill” is the most significant tease on the record, unfolding an alluring lead vocal and pulsing bass lines that would please, if only it didn’t hold to the established norm for all five minutes of the song.  “Romance to the Grave” will keep your interest, but there is still something lacking here that wasn’t in those first six tracks, by now a distant memory.

Then comes “Water in Hell.”

From the opening guitar run, it is clear that “Water in Hell” is more well put together than anything since “Art House Director.”  It still very much bears the Broken Social Scene watermark, adding reverb and quirky background accompaniment, but it just works.  And it works so well that you could listen for all the unique parts that are woven masterfully together, hinting at a looseness without ever falling apart, or simply kick back and rock out.

The album concludes with “Me and My Hand,” which is underwhelming, but pretty and haunting and, thus, a fitting lead-in for anyone who decides to listen to track one again. (Why you wouldn’t give tracks one through six another play, having made it all the way through, I don’t know.)

In short, I haven’t written Broken Social Scene off after this album, but the gap between their excellent songs and their unrealized and mediocre songs is vast.  Accordingly, Forgiveness Rock Records blazes admirably through the first six before falling apart, only to be temporarily revived by the standout “Water in Hell.”  Records like this perhaps serve best as a reminder of why the Beatles set the standard number of tracks at twelve and others, from Bob Dylan to Weezer, have since scaled that back to ten or even into the single digits.

We all like to get the most for our money, but the greater desire should always be to get consistently excellent music that begs for multiple listens – a desire that Forgiveness Rock Record on the whole, for all its solid tracks, simply can’t satisfy.

The Review Is In: Jim Fusco’s “Those Around Us” is 10/10 Stars!

That’s right, everyone.  According to music blogger Andrea Guy from the Mossip Music Blog, Jim Fusco’s “Those Around Us” LP from 2012 is, “Music to make your ears happy” and gives it 10/10 stars!

“These three and a half minute songs are reminders of how fun music can be…Jim is a versatile songwriter, but even more than that, he’s a versatile and talented musician.”

That’s pretty high praise for Jim’s latest effort- if you haven’t heard the album, now’s your chance!  Read the review on Jim Fusco’s official website by clicking HERE, then navigate over to HERE to buy the album online (via CD or iTunes download).  You’ll be glad you did- just ask Ms. Guy!

The Hold Steady’s “Heaven is Whenever” – The Weekend Review

By Chris Moore:

RATING: 4 / 5 stars

The Hold Steady: Keeping riff-driven rock songs relevant since 2004.

To be fair, I’ve only heard one album — 2010’s Heaven is Whenever — but the Hold Steady certainly make a strong case for deserving that aforementioned title on the merits of this most recent release alone. More to the point, the question foremost on my mind as I ran through my second, third, and on through to my tenth listens to this album (in a four day span) was: how has this band managed to release four albums that I’ve never heard of?

Oh, right… Rock music doesn’t “sell” like it used to. I forgot for a moment there.

Honestly, I was nonplussed for much of my first listen. I had put the album on low while talking in the car; what I did hear sounded like the middle-of-the-road derivative drivel that passes for contemporary popular “rock” music.

I’m not name-dropping here, but you can imagine…

When I finally had the mind to crank the volume up, I very clearly heard a band that is not attempting to be something they aren’t. Sure, there are inflections of the Counting Crows and Tom Petty as well as Weezer and the occasional hats-off nod to hip hop dispersed throughout this record, yet although I feel like I should be able to draw more concrete observations in the vein of “The Hold Steady sound like _______”…

Well, I haven’t gotten that far.

And why would I want to? Reviewers — myself included — have a way of breaking down albums and songs to such a degree that, once dismantled, they simply can’t be put back together and enjoyed.

The Hold Steady's

The Hold Steady's "Heaven is Whenever" (2010)

The defining feature of Heaven is Whenever is the tension between the obvious and the subtle, the directly stated and the implied. Namely, these are not the simple, superficial songs that they may appear to be to the casual listener. And it is truly refreshing to read through the lyrics booklet without losing respect for the music.

Kiran Soderqvist of Sputnik Music nails their tone when he writes that frontman Craig Finn “has a way with words and much of their music hints at something much more calculated than bar-light jamming.”

On this record, the lyrics accomplish much of the hinting.

If you’re listening for a Bob Dylan, or even a Jakob Dylan, then you’re liable to be disappointed. But if you’re drawn to the sorts of lines and phrases that will leave you imagining what they might refer to (“There was that whole weird thing with the horses” or “There were a couple pretty crass propositions…” in “The Weekenders”), if you like your allusions served often and served bluntly (“Don’t it suck about the succubi?” in “A Slight Discomfort”), if you’re fond of your metaphors (“I’m from a place with lots of lakes. But sometimes they get soft in the center. And the center is a dangerous place…” in “Soft in the Center”), and if you fancy wordplay (“Jock Jills go for jumping Jacks” in “Our Whole Lives”), then you won’t be disappointed.

Topically, the album is thought-provoking if you’ll let it be, though it’s vague enough — and paced quickly enough — that you’ll never have to think to enjoy these songs.

Upon further consideration, there is more beneath the surface. To begin with, heaven may be the most oft-used word on this record, employed as a metaphor for a beautiful, peaceful relationship in “We Can Get Together,” the lyrics of which provided the album title. Earlier, heaven is what the situation in “The Smidge” feels like, and “Heaven Tonight” makes leaving a party feel “really right” in “Rock Problems.” Later, heaven is the topic for discussions about “hypotheticals” in the superb lead-off single “Hurricane J.”

Not surprisingly, religious iconology oozes forth throughout, as Finn sings about praying on numerous occasions, saints are mentioned repeatedly (specifically, as well as figuratively, as in “Hurricane J” when Jesse’s parents “…didn’t name her for a saint. They named her for a storm”), the Catholic confessional is alluded to in “Our Whole Lives,” and the 1980 Jim Carroll band record Catholic Boy is referenced. Clearly, Heaven is Whenever turns to this thematic underpinning, both seriously and dismissively, and whether intended or not, the album provides a wealth of provocative hooks for the listener.

This is not to say that the Hold Steady’s latest release is a spiritual record or some sort of religious statement. There are many other similarly provocative statements here, such as the advice in “Soft in the Center” that “You can’t get every girl. You’ll get the ones you love the best. You won’t get every girl. You’ll love the ones you get the best. Kid, you can’t kiss every girl…” Every young man confronts this conflict in his programming, that eternal struggle between man as the primitive hunter/gatherer driven by instinct/attraction, and man as the productive member of a society that values monogamy and stability.

There are lighter connections to be made here, as well. For instance, speaking as a life-long dork and sometimes-nerd, I had a visceral reaction to the refrain in “Our Whole Lives” that finds Finn proclaiming, “We’re good guys, but we can’t be good every night. We’re good guys, but we can’t be good our whole lives.”

If you really listen, Heaven is Whenever has much to offer up both lyrically and musically. If you’d rather not, then you’ll still find this album a fun rock record.

And, as a result, I’m left wondering why I didn’t start listening four albums ago.

Locksley’s “Be in Love” (2010) – The Weekend Review

By Chris Moore:

RATING:  4 / 5 stars

No other artist or band brings as much raw, unbridled energy to their music as Locksley.

On their sophomore effort, Be in Love, they are beginning to refine their arrangements and modify the formula established on 2007’s Don’t Make Me Wait.  In many ways, the songs on this record sound very much like the songs on their 2007 debut: the jangly, early Beatles-esque guitars gone punk, the nearly shouted vocals, the breakneck pacing.

And yet there are significant distinctions to be drawn, particularly in the subtleties they have injected throughout these twelve tracks.

The harmonic feedback that functions as the intro to “Love You Too” — and, thereby, to the album as a whole — suggests an implicit desire to postpone and properly frame the energy that has appropriately defined the Locksley sound for the past three years.

Be In Love is a slow burn, if you will, as opposed to an explosion, although it does have its explosive moments.

Elsewhere, the lead vocals are augmented by more intricate arrangements, specifically the background vocals on tracks like “21st Century,” that allow for the layered feel of these songs.  The breakdown after the core of “Days of Youth” betrays more patience than the band has previously possessed, just as “Away From Here” stretches out and breathes, acting as the perfect closer to the first half of this album.

By the time the second half fades in, introduced as was the first half with feedback, it is clear that Locksley have wound themselves up again.  The eminently singable “The Whip” introduces a second batch of songs as varied and nearly as satisfying as the first six tracks.

When Locksley’s debut was re-issued a year after its initial release, they tacked on three additional tracks — not listed as bonus tracks — unceremoniously to the end of the record’s lineup.  With Be in Love, they have turned a corner and begun to process their work with more purpose, deliberate action being taken to ensure the optimal arrangements of individual songs, as well as the overall order of tracks, to work toward a cohesive whole.

Remarkably, they have done this while sacrificing little — if any — of the abandon that made Don’t Make Me Wait so exciting.

Locksley's "Be in Love" (2010)

Locksley's "Be in Love" (2010)

One criticism of their previous work which cannot be lifted here is regarding their lyrics.  Certainly, words aren’t the end-all, and there is much to be said for the “feel” of a musical composition.  Still, what the singer is saying should matter.

Here, at times, the singer isn’t saying much (see the opener: “If you leave me, oh would I be blue” for the first instance of inane lyricism).

However, there are numerous occasions across the record that deliver much more, not least of all the promise of progression from this young act.  Take lead guitarist Kai Kennedy’s excellent “Days of Youth.”  This song opens with the lines, “And your body full of stars, constellations made of scars, recalls a time when you were young, body baking in the sun.  And how I hope that you can see I see you innocent and free; that’s the way that you will stay with the passing of your days.”  This introductory stanza pulls in thematic elements up for consideration throughout the album, particularly that of looking back on youth and ahead to the future, considering how one’s past experiences affect his identity in the present.

This song also includes the title line: “Be in love with you tonight beside an old house full of light, city cold and far away, can be anyone when day comes down.”  It is unclear here whether the singer is advocating a fresh start or endorsing an escape of sorts when he sings about the ability to be “anyone when day comes down.”  At the end of the day, he sings, “And I’ll try to remember you, when we were brand new, in our days of youth.”  This selective imagining of the person in question suggests a desire to banish unwanted thoughts of the present, choosing instead to cling to more pure memories.

This is the subtext throughout Be in Love:  live in the present, but cling to the beautiful simplicity of the past, a question asked as far back as on the 2007 track “The Past and Present” as “Every day now she finds memories when she shuts her eyes…  Leave it, why don’t you leave it?”  The answer three years ago was, “It’s just as well these days are gone.”

Now, the statement being made is clear:  embrace what is true.

Often, what is true is that which has strong roots in the past.

In “Love You Too,” the singer declares, “I remember the morning that I fell in love.  Now every evening, I just can’t get enough.”  Here, the connection between the past and present is clear, and it is an over-simplification to suggest that Locksley’s argument is to resort to nostalgia.  Far from it, on “Down For Too Long,” Laz asserts, “Whatever I am is alright.  Whatever you are is alright.  Whatever it is is alright.  Whatever we are is alright.”

Clearly, the present isn’t so unmanageable.

The point of the album seems to boil down to a central crisis.  On “Down Too Long,” Laz sings, “Shout out!  We’re men in the middle of a shake down!  God don’t it make you want to break down!  Yeah, but you know that we’ve been down for too long.”  Later, as Locksley channels the White Stripes, he sings, “All the time I’m trying to be the man you want me to, but all I ever get from you is silence.  Now I’m on fire and out of control!”

This is expanded upon later, as he sings of a girl who inspires lust rather than love.  “I won’t give in; it isn’t love that I’m thinking of,” he declares.  The implication is apparent: if love is not present, then lust is not worthwhile.

For so many reasons — quality and content to name two — “21st Century should be read as the centerpiece of Be in Love, a track which helps to frame the context of the conflict.  The chorus describes a turning point, specifically the moment that all people face at the intersection between youth and maturity.  As Laz puts it, “We’re all coming together, we’re all falling apart, reaching the end only the end of the start, taking the pictures to remember the times, remember the times when we were young and out of line.”

The friction, the simultaneous shaking into and out of one’s skin, is palpable here.  Again, the topic of memory juxtaposed with living in the present arises.  Ultimately, we are left with the suggestion of promise and possibility: “I’ve got memories of things I’ve never done, some from when I’m older, some from when I’m young.  I’ve got best friends that I never get to see.  I hope I’ll find the time, I hope they find the time for me.”

If nothing else, it is clear that Locksley’s title mantra of “be in love” is, much like Ringo Starr’s 2005 title track, an espousal of the “choose love” school of thought.  In all that we do, we should “find the time” for others in the hope that others will do the same.  We all have “memories of things [we’ve] never done,” so why not work toward actually doing them?

Be in Love is one of the most fun, rocking, simple, and yet subtly smart and purposeful albums of the year.  As I wrote in my review of their debut release, I write again:  I can only imagine the potential for what their next album will be like.