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Father of All...
Barnes and Noble
Father of All...
Current price: $12.79
Barnes and Noble
Father of All...
Current price: $12.79
Size: CD
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Following a chaotic sprawl of messy concept albums in 2012,
Green Day
returned to form in 2016 with the serviceable
Revolution Radio
. Hearing the band get back to their three-chord punk roots was refreshing, if the songs sometimes leaned generic. With their 13th studio album,
Father of All...
, the trio take an aggressive about-face into high-energy glam punk with the most danceable songs they've produced in their 30-plus-year run. Kicking off with the stomping title track (both the song and album also known as "Father of All Motherfuckers" in their uncensored form),
inject a plethora of unfamiliar elements into their sound. Falsetto vocals, handclaps, and a chorus full of grimy hooks land the song somewhere between a speedy reworking of the two-chord riff from
Jimi Hendrix
's "Fire" and the most club-ready bands of the early-2000s rock revival. "Oh Yeah" calls on the chunky beat and snotty chorus of the
Gary Glitter
-penned
Joan Jett
hit "Do You Wanna Touch Me (Oh Yeah)," amping up the song's already glammy swagger. This style continues on the shuffling "Stab You in the Heart," the
Clash
-modeled "Graffitia," and the bouncy dance-pop of "Meet Me on the Roof." For all the power balladry, rock opera dabbling, and other sidebars of their long career, much of
is new territory for the group. Even moments that draw closer to past material like the slow-moving angst of "Junkies on a High" are enhanced by production experiments with vocal samples, piano parts, and electronic touches. Reveling in a sense of abandon, the album is a different kind of fun than we're used to from
. It's also their most streamlined album to date, with ten songs clocking in at an economic 26 minutes and 16 seconds. Light years away from their slap-happy pop-punk beginnings,
are watching the world burn from an air-conditioned dance floor on
. While the album doesn't deliver their most memorable songs, its wild glam experimentation and attitude-heavy performances show a band still seeking new thrills even decades in. ~ Fred Thomas
Green Day
returned to form in 2016 with the serviceable
Revolution Radio
. Hearing the band get back to their three-chord punk roots was refreshing, if the songs sometimes leaned generic. With their 13th studio album,
Father of All...
, the trio take an aggressive about-face into high-energy glam punk with the most danceable songs they've produced in their 30-plus-year run. Kicking off with the stomping title track (both the song and album also known as "Father of All Motherfuckers" in their uncensored form),
inject a plethora of unfamiliar elements into their sound. Falsetto vocals, handclaps, and a chorus full of grimy hooks land the song somewhere between a speedy reworking of the two-chord riff from
Jimi Hendrix
's "Fire" and the most club-ready bands of the early-2000s rock revival. "Oh Yeah" calls on the chunky beat and snotty chorus of the
Gary Glitter
-penned
Joan Jett
hit "Do You Wanna Touch Me (Oh Yeah)," amping up the song's already glammy swagger. This style continues on the shuffling "Stab You in the Heart," the
Clash
-modeled "Graffitia," and the bouncy dance-pop of "Meet Me on the Roof." For all the power balladry, rock opera dabbling, and other sidebars of their long career, much of
is new territory for the group. Even moments that draw closer to past material like the slow-moving angst of "Junkies on a High" are enhanced by production experiments with vocal samples, piano parts, and electronic touches. Reveling in a sense of abandon, the album is a different kind of fun than we're used to from
. It's also their most streamlined album to date, with ten songs clocking in at an economic 26 minutes and 16 seconds. Light years away from their slap-happy pop-punk beginnings,
are watching the world burn from an air-conditioned dance floor on
. While the album doesn't deliver their most memorable songs, its wild glam experimentation and attitude-heavy performances show a band still seeking new thrills even decades in. ~ Fred Thomas