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We Sweat Blood
Barnes and Noble
We Sweat Blood
Current price: $14.49


Barnes and Noble
We Sweat Blood
Current price: $14.49
Size: CD
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All of the warning signs are right there on the cover: the band name in a jagged and stylized font, a close-up on someone playing an electric guitar, and dripping blood. Yeah, that's right, this is a
metal
album. It was pretty clear on
Born a Lion
that
Danko Jones
was already heading in this direction, with loud
boogie
-soaked riffs that owed more to
AC/DC
than the revved-up
funk
that served as the bedrock of the group's two early EPs. Not that you'd confuse
We Sweat Blood
for commercial-grade
: there's very little bombast and absolutely zero hand-wringing earnestness here. The production is incredibly crisp -- instead of soaking everything in sight with reverb, most of the vocals are clean and the drums snap like whip cracks -- and the performance is very clean, with no pointless wailing from either the vocals or guitars. Everything has been stripped back to the basics: sex, Satan, and super-high volume. Sure, the lyrics are so over the top in places that it's almost like the band has become a cartoon: in the album opener,
"Forget My Name,"
"She makes me forget my name" is followed up by "I wanna, I wanna, I wanna burn in Hell with you." Elsewhere, "Baby I want to put some mileage on your lovebike/I want you out on the road with my testosterone make you feel alright" is delivered with a straight face. There's even a tribute to one of fellow Canadian
Neil Young
's sillier lyrics. Deathless prose for the ages this ain't, but it doesn't really matter, because the groove is deep, the
rock
is hard, and those who aren't shaking their hips will probably be resisting the urge to follow along on the ol' air guitar. Yow. ~ Sean Carruthers
metal
album. It was pretty clear on
Born a Lion
that
Danko Jones
was already heading in this direction, with loud
boogie
-soaked riffs that owed more to
AC/DC
than the revved-up
funk
that served as the bedrock of the group's two early EPs. Not that you'd confuse
We Sweat Blood
for commercial-grade
: there's very little bombast and absolutely zero hand-wringing earnestness here. The production is incredibly crisp -- instead of soaking everything in sight with reverb, most of the vocals are clean and the drums snap like whip cracks -- and the performance is very clean, with no pointless wailing from either the vocals or guitars. Everything has been stripped back to the basics: sex, Satan, and super-high volume. Sure, the lyrics are so over the top in places that it's almost like the band has become a cartoon: in the album opener,
"Forget My Name,"
"She makes me forget my name" is followed up by "I wanna, I wanna, I wanna burn in Hell with you." Elsewhere, "Baby I want to put some mileage on your lovebike/I want you out on the road with my testosterone make you feel alright" is delivered with a straight face. There's even a tribute to one of fellow Canadian
Neil Young
's sillier lyrics. Deathless prose for the ages this ain't, but it doesn't really matter, because the groove is deep, the
rock
is hard, and those who aren't shaking their hips will probably be resisting the urge to follow along on the ol' air guitar. Yow. ~ Sean Carruthers