Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Brand New – DAISY [an album review]

brand_new-daisy

I recently obtained Brand New’s brand new album, entitled Daisy, and boy is it heavy (in many ways). Their fourth full-length outing and the first in almost three years, this is definitely the sound of a band that has doing its thing for over a decade. It opens with an odd 50s-ish sample of religious hymn of some sort, which is shortly interrupted by the short and vengeful “Vices,” definitely the heaviest (aurally, at least) song of the album and definitely the heaviest song Brand New has ever written. They scream. They rail on their respective instruments. It rips open your throat and pours itself in, melting your innards. It ends before it grows old, and travels to the polar opposite of the Brand New sound-catalog, a slower and gloomier song that sounds more like the material of their last album. Although now they're not as afraid to let their love of straightforward rock-and-roll show as much, much of the album shares its general vibe and influence with 2006’s The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me, but this run-around cuts out the filler and the more boring moments, keeping the dark hooks and often-Modest Mouse-ish guitar/vocal work melded with some newfound near-metal-ish tendenacies. The album's first single, “At the Bottom,” fairly well represents the album, with a delicate and moody guitar opening, chanty verse, loud and catchy chorus, and hard-hitting breakdown. I find myself jealous of Jesse Lacey’s emotive voice, which has never sounded more angry and yet more mature. In an interview, he's stated that they wrote the album with a live setting in mind, and this definitely comes through on record. Lyrically, much of the subject matter is similar to the last album, revolving around existentialism, life, death, and God. The band has definitely come a long way from their debut album Your Favorite Weapon, which was pretty much straight-up pop-punk-emo; this is precisely the album that I wanted them to make when I heard their second album, Deja Entendu, which was a step towards their current darker sound. While The Devil and God are Raging Inside Me sounded rather hopeless, this latest outing takes hold of this gloom and doom and forms it into wonderful, melancholy bliss.

FINAL SCORE: +3 [on a scale of –5 to +5 (positive numbers = like; negative numbers = dislike)

--Jon

3 comments:

  1. this album is sooooo good. Period. . . . . .

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  2. Complete Album. Everything you've ever wanted from Brand New, really. I loved the Devil and God, but I wished it was more rock n roll based, well it's what Daisy is; Rock n Roll based. When i first heard the album title I thought it would be filled with light melancholy guitar riffs, and light vocals, I was absolutely wrong, and I am glad. Great album from an amazing band.

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  3. A good review...I would have to disagree with "Vices" being the heaviest song that Brand New has ever recorded. For me, that is "Limousine", the fifth track from Devil and God. Perhaps it's because I know the story behind the song--a little girl was killed (and decapitated) by a drunk driver after being the flower girl in her aunts wedding. Happened in the band's home of Long Island.
    All in all, I enjoyed Daisy. Very different but good nonetheless.

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