Album Review: Weezer – Hurley

No one can doubt the quality of Weezer’s 90’s output, but good luck finding a solid consensus on the band’s work from the Green album on. Green wasn’t bad, and in the grand scheme of things, people overlook Maladroit, but Make Believe, The Red Album, and Raditude have a large number of detractors. None of these were truly terrible, but there were more bad ideas than good ones. Switching up the singing/instrument duties, stylistic dabs, collaborating with Lil Wayne

But with Weezer signed to indie superlabel “Epitapth”, thankfully, the good ideas on Hurley definitely outweigh the bad ones. First of all, it rocks. The pop sheen present in recent Weezer records has been done away with, and instead of the album sounding underproduced (a common pitfall of “Let’s be indie” records) it’s produced really well. Guitarists Rivers Cuomo and Brian Bell are firing off like they haven’t in years, and Scott Shriner solidifies his position as Weezer’s most technically skilled bassist. But while Rivers is getting due credit for his accomplishments on Hurley (I’ll get to those later), this is Patrick Wilson’s comeback record. After uninspired work on Weezer’s past few albums, Wilson kicks ass here and reminds us why Pinkerton was one of the great drum albums of the 90s.

And there it is, the dreaded P-word that’s inevitabily found its way into every Weezer review since 1996. In an editorial awhile back, I said we shouldn’t expect Cuomo to make a Pinkerton MK II, but I think that Hurley might be the closest we’ll get. Sonically, it’s a pretty easy comparison. Hell, even lyrically there’s room to compare; “Ruling Me” is vintage Weezer it’s finest, and “Unspoken” bites in a way Rivers hasn’t since “Found my dog/and you’re a bitch”. And Rivers hasn’t sounded this spirited since that infamous album; check the bridge of “Memories” where he outright yells “‘cuz I’m FREAKING BORED” before everything goes quiet.

The big difference between Hurley and, say, Raditude is the energy and effort that the band put into these songs. This energy at least partially saves songs like “Where’s My Sex?” and “Smart Girls”. The former is about Rivers’ daughter mispronouncing “socks” and contains some of the dumbest lyrics Cuomo’s ever put down, but at least the music’s pretty rocking. Pat Wilson’s manic druming saves the otherwise predictable “Smart Girls” from being another Weezer-by-numbers track.

Which makes it a surprising rarity on this album. Despite this album being “sloppy”, the band tailor fits each song to at least keep things from bleeding together. The low-fi piano intro and “Ooh-ooh” backing vocals pad out an already good song and make it a great one on “Run Away”. “Hang On”, meanwhile, is probably my favorite song here. A song with a chorus as huge as this and the “Hang on! Hang on! Hang on!” vocals, this song needs be a live staple. The additional instruments, a hurdy gurdy and a mandolin played by Michael Cera who also did backing vocals (No, I am not making this up), put the finishing touches on this awesome song.

But this isn’t a five star album. “Trainwrecks” and “Brave New World” fall on the bad side of “sloppy”, and despite the energy, “Where’s My Sex?” and “Smart Girls” don’t hold up. While I like “Time Flies”, its low-fi country feel is too left field to feel like an appropriate choice as the album closer. Then again, Weezer has never been about making the appropriate choice.

If given the choice, go for the deluxe version. The under-two-minute cut “All My Friends Are Insects” is cute enough, and “I Want to Be Something” wouldn’t be out of place on one of Rivers’ “Alone” albums. A great cover of “Viva La Vida” is sandwiched between those two, and then things cap out with “Represent”, which was the unofficial song for the US team at the World Cup this year. These gems are enough to confirm Hurley‘s 4/5 stars.

tl;dr: Hurley has more highs and lows, and even the lows aren’t as low as they have been before. Definitely a step in the right direction. 4 stars.

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“I Heard of Them Before You (So That Makes Me Better)”

So I saw Scott Pilgrim VS The World a few weeks ago. Was it a great movie? Absolutely. In fact, I even ended up buying the soundtrack. And I like it well enough; it’s almost as indie as another particular movie with Michael Cera (although frankly I was paying more attention to Ellen Page at the time). And as with every indie soundtrack, it’s led to a whole lot of exposure for bands that haven’t had it before, and in this case it’s Plumtree, who wrote the song “Scott Pilgrim”. And a lot of Plumtree fans like that this now-defunct group is getting attention.

But others don’t. They get snippy and holier  than thou because they’ve heard of the band for years without some stupid movie. The same thing happened with Moldy Peaches fans back when Juno came out, too. In some circles, there’s a sense of elitism within indie music communities; the more obscure the music is, the cooler you are. And once that music is put in a venue that’s easy for everyone to find, well, then it’s not very obscure anymore. Really, there’s a general disdain for discovering music through a popular medium.

In a way, it’s almost like back when Guitar Hero/Rock Band first became relevant. Even if you’d discovered all sorts of great music through those games, you didn’t dare say a word of that to your music savvy friends. Hell, I’ll own up to being one of those people. A friend of mine mentioned a song or two by someone way to the left of what he usually listened to, and I looked at him with a sneer and said “You found them through Guitar Hero, didn’t you?” There can be a perceived “cheapening” of the music when it comes through a video game instead of a band’s MySpace.

But that shouldn’t matter. Because at the end of the day, if you get music that you heard on MTV or from your indie buddy’s laptop, it’s still the same music. Fact of the matter is that no matter where you get it, you’re still listening to it and loving it. That’s the great thing about music, it can be a communal experience for a whole theater or stadium, or an immensely personal affair kept to yourself. It can be both at the same time.

So who cares where you hear it from?

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Mini Mixtape #1

I’ll be honest, I’ve had this idea for months now, but the editorial a week or so back finally gave me the name for it.

Mini Mixtape is a new weekly thing where put up four songs I’ve been listening to this week with a little blurb on each of them. And like a real mixtape, it’s totally open. Some weeks it might be random, some weeks there may be a theme…really, anything goes. It’s like an opposite Radio Rant. So, let’s get started!

Sonic Youth – Antenna (2009): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1B_NVayA_VI
“Antenna” is kind of a summation of what 00’s Sonic Youth sounds like. It’s chill but still has tension, it’s structured but has a jam section, and Thurston Moore’s lyrics sound cool enough without making a lick of sense (seriously, that chorus is so singalongable and I still have no idea what it means). And never in its 6 minute length does it feel too long or slow.

Flogging Molly – Seven Deadly Sins (2004): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plfVQV-klZo
Flogging Molly mix together pirates, punk rock send ups (the Tommy Gun line is a Joe Strummer nod), and their brand of Celtic Punk for almost three minutes of unchained tomfoolery. Sheer fun at it’s drunkest.

Streetlight Manifesto – Here’s to Life (2003): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srFcYHosjsc
Streetlight’s made a career out of musically kicking the ass out of every other ska band, off the wall energy, and Tomas Kalnoky’s rapid fire philosophy essay lyrics. And all of those elements are awesomely represented in this Latin tinged anti-suicide number.

Neutral Milk Hotel – Holland, 1945 (1998): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCjpbjCH5L0
Never has a song about Anne Frank sounded so peppy. Probably the most accessible song on the band’s masterpiece In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, “Holland, 1945” is a poppy, horn laden, and fuzzed out addition to the canon of indie rock.

Well, that was fun. See you next week!

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Radio Rant: Katy Perry – Teenage Dream

Well, I’ve had a leave of absence. Let’s get cracking with a Radio Rant to celebrate my good return, shall we?

‘kay, just gonna open up the ol’ Billboard Top 10, and…hm.

Really? I’m gone for a freaking week, and another Katy Perry song went to number 1? I’d veto this down right the hell now, but the only top 5 song I haven’t touched yet is by Bruno Mars, who is 0 for 2 on making a good impression on me. And the rest of the top 10 is…well, not now. Fine. You guys wanted to hear it, so here it is: Katy Perry’s…(oh, God) #1 hit, “Teenage Dream”.

Ok, so, it’s the follow-up to We-Wrote-This-As-A-Summer-Hit summer hit “California Gurls”; a silly-stupid but not-terrible cut of glossy electropop. How do they follow that up?Well, musically Perry seems to have remembered that the whole pop-rock thing on One of the Boys worked pretty well; in fact, the music sounds vaguely familiar to Katy’s first single “I Kissed a Girl”. Not really a bad thing, but the very slight edge “I Kissed a Girl” had has been filed down, and there’s no bite to this music at all.

The most obvious flaw in “Teenage Dream” is that it really shows Perry’s limits as a vocalist. I mean, she’s never been the worst singer around, but she gets really close to overextending herself on the verses here. Seriously, singing this song live will be a game of vocal Russian Roulette on if her voice cracks or not. There’s nothing wrong with reaching for a note, but when you’re overreaching this much, bad things can happen.

Guess I should talk about the chorus while I’m at it. Yeah, the “You. Make. Me. FeelLikeI’mLivingA. Teen. Age. Dream.” part still annoys the hell out of me, but at least she’s back in a range that’s comfortable to hear. I’d also like to point out that I hear that “whoosh” sound effect at the start of every chorus nowadays. And lyrically, there’s the whole “we’ll live forever, let’s runaway, there’s just love and happiness because we’re teenagers” thing, which apparently is the life of every teenager based on what culture tells us. Huh. I guess that was in mine, too…just mixed between the awkward growing, jilted hormones and emotions, poor self-image, stressful social relations, and trying to be an adult while lacking the maturity and growth.

Which brings me to the lyrics. At first I thought they were just kind of uninspired and bland, but now…well, you’ll see. Things start off innocently enough with Katy playing the cute girl-next-door card, saying lines like. “You think I’m pretty without any makeup on/You think I’m funny when I tell the punchline wrong”, and, “Every February you’ll be my valentine”. Then it gets to the, “Let’s go all the way tonight/No regrets, just love/We can dance until we die/You and I will be young forever” part. And that immortality and playful wrecklessness is pretty cool, but at the same time, it can lead you somewhere bad.

On a whole, I’ve never had a good impression on this song. “California Gurls” might have been dumber, but at least it was catchy. “Teenage Dream”, meanwhile, sounds like bad Kelly Clarkson with Katy trying too hard. Thank God we grow up.

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