Home
Dark Horse
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Dark Horse
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Dark Horse
Current price: $12.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
Nickelback
are not known for their insight, but
Chad Kroeger
's caterwauling claim that "we got no class, no taste" on
"Burn It to the Ground,"
the second song on their sixth album,
Dark Horse
, is a slice of perceptive, precise self-examination. They work with legendary producer
Robert "Mutt" Lange
(the sonic architect behind
Back in Black
and
Pyromania
, two of hard rock's towering monuments) here, and
Lange
decides to give the band a production caught somewhere between the two extremes of
AC/DC
Def Leppard
, pumping up some muscle on
's heaviest rockers and adding some color to their power ballads, suggesting some heretofore verboten suggestions of modernity in the form of electronic rhythms, even taking it to the extreme of adding drum loops to the surefire crossover hit
"Gotta Be Somebody."
Lyrically,
Kroeger
trots out a parade of dirty little ladies in pretty pink thongs, porn stars, strippers, and sluts, all of whom are desired and despised for showing too much skin; he's either had his heart broken by those loose women, or he's singing to the good girl left at home while he's out on the town.
do manage to shed their leathery rock skin a couple of times, first with an arena-rocking
"Burn It to the Ground"
and then echoing
Toby Keith
's
"Let's Talk About Us"
on the white-boy rap pre-chorus for
"Something in Your Mouth,"
but these are mere glimpses of something unpredictable;
was constructed entirely from the group's standard power ballad and hard rock templates. The mood only lightens at the end of the record, when
and company take a break from carousing to kick back with bros and a bong for
"This Afternoon"
-- its strum-along choruses are a relief but so is its mellowness, as
seems calmer, relaxed, even friendly. Maybe it's because there were no women in the picture. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
are not known for their insight, but
Chad Kroeger
's caterwauling claim that "we got no class, no taste" on
"Burn It to the Ground,"
the second song on their sixth album,
Dark Horse
, is a slice of perceptive, precise self-examination. They work with legendary producer
Robert "Mutt" Lange
(the sonic architect behind
Back in Black
and
Pyromania
, two of hard rock's towering monuments) here, and
Lange
decides to give the band a production caught somewhere between the two extremes of
AC/DC
Def Leppard
, pumping up some muscle on
's heaviest rockers and adding some color to their power ballads, suggesting some heretofore verboten suggestions of modernity in the form of electronic rhythms, even taking it to the extreme of adding drum loops to the surefire crossover hit
"Gotta Be Somebody."
Lyrically,
Kroeger
trots out a parade of dirty little ladies in pretty pink thongs, porn stars, strippers, and sluts, all of whom are desired and despised for showing too much skin; he's either had his heart broken by those loose women, or he's singing to the good girl left at home while he's out on the town.
do manage to shed their leathery rock skin a couple of times, first with an arena-rocking
"Burn It to the Ground"
and then echoing
Toby Keith
's
"Let's Talk About Us"
on the white-boy rap pre-chorus for
"Something in Your Mouth,"
but these are mere glimpses of something unpredictable;
was constructed entirely from the group's standard power ballad and hard rock templates. The mood only lightens at the end of the record, when
and company take a break from carousing to kick back with bros and a bong for
"This Afternoon"
-- its strum-along choruses are a relief but so is its mellowness, as
seems calmer, relaxed, even friendly. Maybe it's because there were no women in the picture. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine