Home
Darker Days
Barnes and Noble
Darker Days
Current price: $13.99


Barnes and Noble
Darker Days
Current price: $13.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
The second album by Los Angeles street punks
Time Again
follows exactly the precedent established by their debut:
Darker Days
is straight-up old-school hardcore with just enough of a pop edge on songs like
"Lines Are Faded"
and the less-than-sincere breakup song
"Movin' On"
to potentially appeal to the kids who think
Good Charlotte
is a punk band. The best songs here are the shortest and hardest, one- or two-minute hardcore blasts like
"You're Goin' Down"
and
"TV Static"
that bear the most influence of the days of early
Black Flag
Circle Jerks
. The more commercial songs are pleasantly tuneful, but even more faceless than by-the-numbers pogo fodder like
"Montreal (Street Kids)"
"Streetwalker."
It just seems odd that
has committed to this split-the-difference approach of trying to appeal to the Hot Topic crowd as well as the kids who think the Hot Topic crowd are pathetic poseur wannabes: the band is equally blandly competent at both styles of music, but the presence of one seems guaranteed to annoy the fans of the other. ~ Stewart Mason
Time Again
follows exactly the precedent established by their debut:
Darker Days
is straight-up old-school hardcore with just enough of a pop edge on songs like
"Lines Are Faded"
and the less-than-sincere breakup song
"Movin' On"
to potentially appeal to the kids who think
Good Charlotte
is a punk band. The best songs here are the shortest and hardest, one- or two-minute hardcore blasts like
"You're Goin' Down"
and
"TV Static"
that bear the most influence of the days of early
Black Flag
Circle Jerks
. The more commercial songs are pleasantly tuneful, but even more faceless than by-the-numbers pogo fodder like
"Montreal (Street Kids)"
"Streetwalker."
It just seems odd that
has committed to this split-the-difference approach of trying to appeal to the Hot Topic crowd as well as the kids who think the Hot Topic crowd are pathetic poseur wannabes: the band is equally blandly competent at both styles of music, but the presence of one seems guaranteed to annoy the fans of the other. ~ Stewart Mason