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Rancid
Indestructible
label: Hellcat Records
released: 08.19.2003
our score: 3.5 out of 5.0
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The
Last (and Maybe the Best) Gang in Town
by:
matt
cibula |
It's okay
to like Rancid now. It used to be completely uncool on a lot of
levels-they were too poppy and didn't play REAL punk music, they
owed too heavy a debt to the Clash and the Specials and the Jam
and all their favorite groups, Tim Armstrong's British accent
was completely fabricated and pretentious for a California boy,
etc. These haters always admitted that "Ruby Soho" was
kind of a dope song, and that Armstrong and Lars Frederiksen were
probably really really nice sincere punk-loving guys and all,
but pointed out that we only knew about it because the video was
on MTV and the song was on the radio. The radio? Ew.
There was
kind of a backlash against Rancid then, especially as they started
to show their roots a little more. It wasn't huge, it wasn't major,
but suddenly no one was talking about them hardly at all. This
coincided with the rise of rap-rock and pop-punk and emo, three
musics that owed more to groups like Rancid and Green Day than
anyone would ever admit. Which is why the haters were astounded
when Rancid came back harder on their 2000 self-titled album,
proving that they were still around and still trying their ass
off to make fun loud music with positive political lyrics. This
beat the punk-poppers at their own game by being a) good and b)
fun.
Well, those
haters are gonna hate Indestructible even more, because
these 19 songs just fly off the disc and into the heart. Some
of these tunes are just flat-out burners like the title track,
which sounds like a sweeter Motorhead at times, and "Out
of Control," which is straight out of LA Punk 101; some are
more influenced by reggae and two-tone ska ("Red Hot Moon,"
"Back Up Against the Wall"); some are punk-pop all the
way; some sound just exactly like hair metal. Hell, there's even
a slow piano-fueled ballad called "Arrested in Shanghai,"
which makes a slow jam for radical punk couples to lick each others'
piercings to. (Hey, punks need love too.)
But diversity
is not what makes this such a great record-for that, we have to
turn to Rancid's commitment to its audience and its music. This
is, to a large part, an album informed by loss; Armstrong's relationship
ending forms the basis for "Tropical London," with its
chorus of "If you lose me, you lose a good thing / I know
that for sure", and "Otherside" is a weeper from
Fredericksen to his dead brother Robert. But it's also a record
full of faith in friends ("If I fall back down, you're gonna
pick me back up again") and in the power of music ("Punk
rock was my way out / It was always in my blood"). They believe
that they can change things in this world, just like their hero
"the great Joe Strummer," and that's what the music
sounds like.
Brett Gurewitz'
production needs a special mention here, because this is one of
the cleanest-sounding grimy records you're ever going to hear,
somehow timeless and immediate at the same time. The guitars bludgeon
the ears without burning them, Brett Reed's drums have grunge
shadings but all-punk roots, and the singers' voices are right
up there in your business. The guitar layers on "David Courtney"
should win someone something, and the new wave punch on "Born
Frustrated" (they even do "Hey! Hey! Hey!" things
like the Romantics!) is retro-fun and utterly funky.
So so what
if the lyrics are way too uplifting for real punks? And so what
if that British accent thing just drives a fellow insane after
a little while? (It's impossible to understand what the 'ell they're
talking about on several songs, which is why it's good that the
lyric booklet is so complete. It even gives background on each
song, which is bonus.) And so what if we edge into self-help/cornball
territory on a couple of songs? It sounds great, it's fun when
it's not being intense and vice versa, and it proves that some
people out there somewhere really care about what they're doing,
and that that is an important thing.
Plus, it rocks
the fuck out.
27-Sep-2003
1:31 PM

If you
liked Indestructible...
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| Tracklist:
1.
Indestructible
2. Fall Back Down
3. Red Hot Moon
4. David Courtney
5. Start Now
6. Out of Control
7. Django
8. Arrested in Shanghai
9. Travis Bickle
10. Memphis
11. Spirit of '87
12. Ghost Band
13. Tropical London
14. Roadblock
15. Born Frustrated
16. Back Up Against the Wall
17. Ivory Coast
18. Stand Your Ground
19. Otherside
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