ThePunkSite.com | Boy Sets Fire - The Misery Index: Notes From The Plague Years
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| CD:
The Misery Index: Notes From The Plague Years |
Artist:
Boy Sets Fire |
| Label:
Equal Vision Records |
Rating:
4/5 |
| Best
Song: Empire |
Reviewer:
Bobby Gorman |
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It's weird how sometimes it takes a while for a band to grow on you. You hear
one song here and there and slowly start to fall in love with them before you
finally pick up their CDs. On the other hand, sometimes, a band just get thrown
at you - and it's like a sign from above saying you need to check these out.
My introduction to Boy Sets Fire was like that. First a friend
casually brought them up in conversation, saying how much she liked them. The
next day I was downtown and I saw an old CD of their in the clearance rack,
and knew I had to buy it. Three or four days later, I came home from school,
and there, on my table, was the band's newest album The Misery Index: Notes
From The Plague Years waiting to be heard. And while the whole saying
it was a "sign" thing is probably pure bullshit, I'm sure glad I finally got
around to sitting down and hearing the band.
But like I said, I don't know anything about their past - other than their
2002 EP Live For Today which I mentioned above. So I have nothing
to compare it to, only heresay and other's opinions. Which, is probably a nice
way to absorb this album, because for me, they had a clean slate. Nothing to
make up for, nothing to prove, and nothing to continue. And what I got was
simply amazing.
I've always picture Boy Sets Fire as a hardcore band, with
random screaming and heavy breakdowns - so I was never really excited to jump
into their open arms. And while they definitely still have their hardcore moments
on here, I'd probably call them an incredibly intelligent rock band instead;
because somehow they are able to put a sequence of seemingly random genres
together in one CD, and it all fits perfectly.
They have the incredibly hardcore moments and songs like A Far Cry,
Social Register Fanclub, Final Communique and the second half of
the phenomenal opener, Walk Astray. But then they throw
curve balls at you with songs like Deja Coup and So
Long... And Thanks For All The Crutches by throwing in the use of
trombone at the choruses, very reminiscent of The Killing Moon.
Still, it's songs like Requiem,
(10) and Counting, and Empire which really hold
the CD together with their much more mellow mood.
Nevertheless, the two things that make this CD stand out so much are Josh
Latshaw's absolutely mind blowing vocals, and the underlying political anthem
sewn throughout the album album. And while I have no idea how they'll reproduce
some of these songs live, for a CD, it's incredibly entertaining and worth
picking up.
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