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With their latest offering, New Wave,
Against Me! proves its status as
a modern, American, Stiff Little Fingers.
From liberal doses of personal declaration and
raging (lost) love songs—to overt protest
anthems, from riveting guitar work to provocative
punk-ness, whilst cranking out their work through
a corporate major label—the similarities
are remarkable.
Against Me! is a working class band, through
and through, and they believe the workers should
control the factory.
This couldn’t be any clearer than on the
very first track—the title track—on
this, their first offering on the Sire imprint.
Singer Tom Gabel declares and defends the band’s
intentions from the get go:
We can be the bands we want to hear.
We can define our own generation.
Is there anybody on the receiving end?
Are you ready to brave new directions?
Come on and wash these shores away.
Come on and wash these shores away.
I am looking for the crest,
I am looking for the crest of a new wave.
This is no new pronouncement. Against Me! doesn’t
create its art through the inspiration of a muse.
Rather, its muse is its collective musical career.
Their songs incessantly refer to their experiences
as musicians and to the redundant conjecture of
the biz in full legalese. Moving right along to
“Up The Cuts,” the boys take head-on
the nay-sayers who will inevitably accuse them
of selling out:
All the insiders rumor over the decline in
sales.
All the buzz is happening in the new digital market
place.
FBI warning printed on the flipside.
Under penalty of law piracy will be prosecuted.
In MRR someone asks the question,
“With the instant availability of information
and content so easily obtainable
is the culture now a product that’s disposable?”
All the punks still singing the same song.
Is there anyone thinking what I am?
Is there any other alternative?
Forward a few tracks and we have “Borne
On The FM Waves Of The Heart,” a nearly
tear-jerking reality of rock love gone as fucked
up as it usually does. A more bitter than sweet
detail of a(nother) break-up. This is the kind
of stuff that every kid into rock and roll can
grasp; and this kind of material is yet another
reason that Against Me! has garnered such a huge
following of empathetic fans.
The boys aren’t afraid of self deprecation
either. On “Americans Abroad,” Gabel
acknowledges his societal influences as a world
traveler:
Here we are, a rock band looking for new
audiences.
Wherever we go, Coca-Cola's already been.
Americans abroad!
Americans abroad!
And I just can't help but think that there's nothing
in sight.
And while I hope I'm not like them, I'm not so
sure.
When it comes down to it this is another AM!
album, and AM! fans will love it. The fact of
the matter is that these boys have developed a
very broad fan base, one that requires wide distribution.
The only way to handle the popularity of these
artists is to handle it through a large and experienced
label. This is exactly what happened to Green
Day in 1992. Lookout! Records could never have
distributed the hundreds of thousands of copies
of Dookie that the public demanded immediately
upon its release. Not to mention the 10 million
albums the band has sold over all. It’s
that simple.
If you don’t appreciate that, right on.
But for every dissenter, there are a thousand
happy fans out there that get it; and no one’s
gonna stop ‘em.
www.againstme.com
www.myspace.com/againstme
-Jef Hoskins, July 18, 2007
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