Home
For Blood & Empire
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
For Blood & Empire
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
For Blood & Empire
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
Though adamantly anti-major-label at one point in their career,
finally decided to emerge from the underground and make the leap from the indie world to the realms of
in April 2005. Thus, after being together for over ten years and boasting almost as many releases,
marks
's entry into the big leagues. Fans and naysayers alike couldn't help but question the band's new label status leading up to the album's release. Could a group with such a brash, heated political agenda and in-your-face leftist politics actually -- and believably -- fit alongside
and
with their credibility intact? At the very least, the band's outrage and frustration hadn't been tempered.
was conceived pissed-off at the government (among other subjects), and things sure hadn't cooled down with
and crew comfortably residing in the White House throughout the early 2000s. As would be expected then,
is boiling over with vehement anti-
attacks and confrontational lyrics that overwhelmingly target the war in Iraq -- from war profiteering to consequences of depleted uranium to omnipresent propaganda to casualties on both sides of the fight. With all of the singalong, fist-in-the-air anthems still present (and more than enough background "woahs"), fans should at least be happy to hear that their beloved
hasn't compromised its grasp of the surging chorus. After all, the scrappiness and raw rage of earlier efforts gave way to the more
-oriented and melodic nature of later work a few albums back, and this effort is no different. Even the opening notes of
are comfortingly familiar, as there's always been something about their guitar work that makes a song utterly
even before
's distinctive vocals kick in. There's a sort of a
-ish feel to
while
could just as easily fit on a
record. And though the slight ramble of the acoustic-driven
sounds like
's solo work, it gets as close to
balladry as
is probably ever going to get. The album is a tad clean and subdued, but this doesn't necessarily detract from
's message, which comes across as loud and clear as it always does. Kids picking this up won't necessarily have to figure politics out on their own, as
tells them exactly what to think and the liner notes brim with quotes and explanations backing their ideas up further. So with a new home on
, the band is now kind of like the Hot Topic version of
. Leftist beliefs with rounded edges that are accessibly packaged yet still offensive enough to some to be "
." And while their convictions are assuredly sincere -- and the topics brought up important to discuss -- something about the band can't help to cause one to step back and raise an eyebrow a bit. Overall, and despite its major label status,
is through and through another
album. Thus, those who enjoy the guys' political snottiness will find plenty to like here, but the album won't do anything to convert those who have always found them slightly annoying. [This is the clean version of the album.] ~ Corey Apar