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This Addiction
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This Addiction
Current price: $23.99
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Barnes and Noble
This Addiction
Current price: $23.99
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This Addiction
was promoted as a return to roots for
the Alkaline Trio
, no doubt as a ploy to bait old fans who have been waiting over ten years for the second coming of
Goddamnit!
With
Matt Allison
(the producer responsible for most of the band's earliest work) manning the boards and new label
Epitaph
footing the bill, things looked promising. The lead single and title track was a great start, and showed itself to be close to a return to form, with its blazing surge of guitars and slightly vintage feel (traces of
"My Friend Peter"
can be heard), and it seemed to reveal a band with something to prove. However, the deeper you get into
the more apparent it becomes that the model for their punk past must be
From Here to Infirmary
(not the heralded classic
), since the end result is still the same polished album full of vaguely gothic and bloody references where characters like Draculina live -- no real bitterness, sore-throat defiance, or endearing heartache to be found. Despite their efforts to convince listeners otherwise,
Alkaline Trio
just can't seem to recapture the spirit of their early days, when purpose and emotion fueled every note. Instead, one is left with totally competent -- and at times, yes, catchy -- songs that ring just a bit too hollow compared to the urgent leave-it-all-on-the-floor guts of those earliest releases. Once the listener gets past the initial bait and switch,
takes a few spins to sink in, but when it does, several tracks do stick out of the bunch, the title track and
"Off the Map"
being some of the strongest.
Dan Andriano
has a solid showing, but with only three songs compared to
Matt Skiba
's eight, it would have been nice to hear him more, especially since
Skiba
's lyrics leave much to be desired. So despite the polished and punchy singalong choruses,
is really just more of the same recycled melodies from
the Trio
rather than any sort of rebirth. Those who have been enjoying what
have been releasing for the better part of the 2000s will love
all the same, but everyone else who still clings to hope of the band reclaiming its former fury may finally just throw up their hands and move on. ~ Corey Apar
was promoted as a return to roots for
the Alkaline Trio
, no doubt as a ploy to bait old fans who have been waiting over ten years for the second coming of
Goddamnit!
With
Matt Allison
(the producer responsible for most of the band's earliest work) manning the boards and new label
Epitaph
footing the bill, things looked promising. The lead single and title track was a great start, and showed itself to be close to a return to form, with its blazing surge of guitars and slightly vintage feel (traces of
"My Friend Peter"
can be heard), and it seemed to reveal a band with something to prove. However, the deeper you get into
the more apparent it becomes that the model for their punk past must be
From Here to Infirmary
(not the heralded classic
), since the end result is still the same polished album full of vaguely gothic and bloody references where characters like Draculina live -- no real bitterness, sore-throat defiance, or endearing heartache to be found. Despite their efforts to convince listeners otherwise,
Alkaline Trio
just can't seem to recapture the spirit of their early days, when purpose and emotion fueled every note. Instead, one is left with totally competent -- and at times, yes, catchy -- songs that ring just a bit too hollow compared to the urgent leave-it-all-on-the-floor guts of those earliest releases. Once the listener gets past the initial bait and switch,
takes a few spins to sink in, but when it does, several tracks do stick out of the bunch, the title track and
"Off the Map"
being some of the strongest.
Dan Andriano
has a solid showing, but with only three songs compared to
Matt Skiba
's eight, it would have been nice to hear him more, especially since
Skiba
's lyrics leave much to be desired. So despite the polished and punchy singalong choruses,
is really just more of the same recycled melodies from
the Trio
rather than any sort of rebirth. Those who have been enjoying what
have been releasing for the better part of the 2000s will love
all the same, but everyone else who still clings to hope of the band reclaiming its former fury may finally just throw up their hands and move on. ~ Corey Apar