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Barnes and Noble

Ready to Die

Current price: $14.99
Ready to Die
Ready to Die

Barnes and Noble

Ready to Die

Current price: $14.99

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arrives with none of the heady expectations of , the 2007 comeback that found and , aided by the sturdy , attempting to re-create some of the madness of . For a variety of reasons it didn't work, but it wasn't so much an embarrassment as it was, well, weirdness, from a band weighed down more by its own ongoing internal tensions than its legacy. A little over a year after its release, died and the group did what they did last time they were hanging by a thread: they brought in guitarist . Back in 1973, he was the fuel that propelled , an album that found sitting in uneasily on bass, and he and recorded a bit after final '70s implosion, but after 1980 he retired from music, choosing to pursue electrical engineering. So, in a sense, was further removed from rock & roll than , who always plugged away in a variety of Ann Arbor- and Detroit-based rock bands, which makes the success of this second-phased reunion all the more remarkable. Because feels like a album in all the right ways, throwing out the halting, lurching hard murk of in favor of successive blasts of sleaze, intermittently interrupted by the occasional moment of reflection. Ballads were verboten in the olden days -- whenever slowed the tempo, they got mired in a dirge -- so this pair of quiet ones suggest an older band, one filled with musicians facing their seventies (perhaps that's the origin of the title?), but the rest of showcases grizzled, gnarly vets who not only know how to deliver the goods but take pleasure in doing so. That sense of joy is a new wrinkle for : at their purest, their fun was nihilistic, celebrating the joy in destruction. Here, there's a sense of joy in still being alive and still being able to make noise. Much of that comes from -- who not only writes and plays guitar but produces the album, giving it a clean, efficient attack -- as the guitarist seemingly relishes the opportunity to get back into the game. If he takes things seriously, most decidedly does not, happily succumbing to silliness -- he's on his knees for those Double Ds, bringing to mind the who's always anxious to encore with "Louie Louie" -- and that reckless vulgarity is preferable to the strained pretension of , particularly when it's supported by the righteous noise of the reconstituted . Liberated from the weight of their history, they're just ready to rock while they still can, and that's why is, against all odds, a terrific album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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