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On the Mouth
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On the Mouth
Current price: $13.99
Barnes and Noble
On the Mouth
Current price: $13.99
Size: CD
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After pushing the buzzsaw abandon of their earliest records to its logical extreme on the masterful
No Pocky for Kitty
,
Superchunk
begins reinventing itself with their third full-length,
On the Mouth
, a record as invigorating as it is frustrating. Without sacrificing any of the energy or conviction of past efforts, many of the disc's 13 songs harness
Mac McCaughan
's breathless
pop-punk
melodies into tighter, more demanding contexts -- highlights, like the singles
"Mower"
and
"The Question Is How Fast,"
introduce a new arsenal of shifting rhythms and explosively tense dynamics which reveal unexpectedly limitless possibilities within the classic
approach. The problem is that
equates to something less than the sum of its parts -- while tracks like the blistering
"From the Curve"
"Package Thief"
barrel forth with the sheer recklessness of old, their adherence to the band's past makes for an ill-fitting match alongside the album's more ambitious moments. More problematic, the slow, plodding
"Swallow That"
-- while an admirable departure from the norm -- is simply tedious. Still, more often than not
comes up with the goods, and remains a pivotal turning point in
's continued evolution. ~ Jason Ankeny
No Pocky for Kitty
,
Superchunk
begins reinventing itself with their third full-length,
On the Mouth
, a record as invigorating as it is frustrating. Without sacrificing any of the energy or conviction of past efforts, many of the disc's 13 songs harness
Mac McCaughan
's breathless
pop-punk
melodies into tighter, more demanding contexts -- highlights, like the singles
"Mower"
and
"The Question Is How Fast,"
introduce a new arsenal of shifting rhythms and explosively tense dynamics which reveal unexpectedly limitless possibilities within the classic
approach. The problem is that
equates to something less than the sum of its parts -- while tracks like the blistering
"From the Curve"
"Package Thief"
barrel forth with the sheer recklessness of old, their adherence to the band's past makes for an ill-fitting match alongside the album's more ambitious moments. More problematic, the slow, plodding
"Swallow That"
-- while an admirable departure from the norm -- is simply tedious. Still, more often than not
comes up with the goods, and remains a pivotal turning point in
's continued evolution. ~ Jason Ankeny