We look back a lot on this site to music from earlier times. Lately we've been spending some time looking at one of today's bands, Green Day, which hails from northern California. So let's look at just one more review of
21st Century Breakdown. This review, by Eric Snider, comes from Creative Loafing.com.
Review: Green Day's 21st Century Breakdown It may be a quaint notion in the download era, but I still think of the Album as a distinct artistic statement. Green Day obviously agrees, because 2004's
American Idiot was a rock opera and their new one,
21st Century Breakdown, is a 70-minute, three-part cycle.
And therein lies the problem.
21st Century Breakdown, as an artistic statement, is ultimately too much of a good thing. Listening to all 18 songs becomes, at some point, burdensome - an exercise in pop-punk overload.
That the disc is essentially a big slab of agitprop set to catchy hooks and big guitars only compounds the problem. As if the title "Know Your Enemy" wasn't evidence enough, here's a sample lyric: "Bringing on the fury/ The choir infantry / Revolt against the honor to obey."
Angry, alienated sick-and-tired Green Day rail against religion, conformism, complacency, consumerism, media overload, all the usual tropes. Americans are little more than zombies. Did you know, for instance, that according to Green Day, "You're the victim of the system/ You are your own worst enemy"?
Maybe I'm cranky, maybe I've heard it all, but I'm not of a mind to be preached to and berated by Billie Joe Armstrong and his wing men.
If Green Day had filtered their message through some interesting characters or narratives, I might be more receptive, but, as far as
Breakdown is concerned, I'll take my bludgeoning from power chords instead of The Message.
And so I turn my attention to the music. When Green Day's
Dookie album blew up in 1994, a new genre was coined: pop-punk. Fifteen years on, no one does it better - not even close. The Northern Cali trio can really work wonders with a limited bag of simple chords, crafting them into ever-catchy progressions. They are also superior hook-smiths;
Breakdown contains nary a clunker melody.
And to further add to the album's success, Green Day includes several songs that break from the pop-punk mold, or at least stretch it: the piano-driven "Last Night on Earth," a love song (even angry geezer punks take time out for love); "Restless Heart Syndrome," a wistful mid-tempo piece that dials back the guitar and finds Armstrong sliding into a vulnerable falsetto; a few songs - notably "21 Guns" and the closer "See the Lights" - that emphasize the pop over the punk, and take their own cues from '60's titans like The Who and The Beatles.
The title track, which follows a short intro song, is the grandest of all the statements, the theme- and tempo-setter. It forcefully flows through three sections: straight rock, followed by a jiggish, Celtic-inspired romp, capped by an epic, slowed-down coda. Triumphant.
So you might be thinking now: Does this dude like the album or not? Short answer is yes, I do. But here's the qualifier: Listening to any one, two, even three or four songs from
21st Century Breakdown is an absolute treat. But trying to swallow the whole thing tends to trigger my gag reflex.
Rating: 3.5 out of 4 stars
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