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After the Party [LP]
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After the Party [LP]
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
After the Party [LP]
Current price: $14.99
Size: CD
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Pennsylvanian punks
the Menzingers
deepen their ruminations of the self with
After the Party
, their big-hearted fifth LP and third release for
Epitaph
. Nostalgic leanings are nothing new to
, who have been growing ever more introspective with each release, but as the Scranton natives age into their thirties, they've struck a resilient tone that plays well against their grandiose guitar rock. Led by co-vocalists
Greg Barnett
and
Tom May
,
put forth a rip-roaring sound for the masses that still harks back to the Rust Belt Americana punk that helped them earn their fans in the first place. While questions like "Where are we gonna go now that our twenties are over?" will connect most squarely with their own generation, the uncertainty of aging into new responsibilities is a threshold every punk must cross, and
do so here with undimmed vitality on opener "Tellin' Lies." Nearly every song boasts bold, rousing riffs thanks to the band's own muscle and producer
Will Yip
's beefy production, but it's the big melodies that keep their ship sailing forward. Standouts like "Thick as Thieves," "Lookers," "Bad Catholics," and the stoutly sung anthem "The Bars" show
in fine form at a career point when many begin to go stale or diverge into different directions altogether. Sure, they're not breaking the mold, but with
, they manage to toe the line between subtlety and vigor, aging into their next phase with another solid release. ~ Timothy Monger
the Menzingers
deepen their ruminations of the self with
After the Party
, their big-hearted fifth LP and third release for
Epitaph
. Nostalgic leanings are nothing new to
, who have been growing ever more introspective with each release, but as the Scranton natives age into their thirties, they've struck a resilient tone that plays well against their grandiose guitar rock. Led by co-vocalists
Greg Barnett
and
Tom May
,
put forth a rip-roaring sound for the masses that still harks back to the Rust Belt Americana punk that helped them earn their fans in the first place. While questions like "Where are we gonna go now that our twenties are over?" will connect most squarely with their own generation, the uncertainty of aging into new responsibilities is a threshold every punk must cross, and
do so here with undimmed vitality on opener "Tellin' Lies." Nearly every song boasts bold, rousing riffs thanks to the band's own muscle and producer
Will Yip
's beefy production, but it's the big melodies that keep their ship sailing forward. Standouts like "Thick as Thieves," "Lookers," "Bad Catholics," and the stoutly sung anthem "The Bars" show
in fine form at a career point when many begin to go stale or diverge into different directions altogether. Sure, they're not breaking the mold, but with
, they manage to toe the line between subtlety and vigor, aging into their next phase with another solid release. ~ Timothy Monger