Tuesday, October 20, 2009

GREEN DAY "21st CENTURY BREAKDOWN"

GENRE(S): Punk - Rock

PREAMBLE - Green Day's second attempt at Rock Opera. Why try to reproduce what you could only get right once?

LOOK: Two star-crossed lovers are stenciled onto Green Day's 8th release. I assumed the graffiti look had lost it's potency since its exposure through Mainstream Hip-Hop and over-exposure with turn-of-the-21st-century Rock. The artwork, credited to Chris Bilheimer, mirrors artists such as Banksy; originality is nowhere to be found here.

LISTEN: The massive success of American Idiot (2004), caused a wave of enthusiasm amongst longtime fans happy to see our favorite Bay Area Trio take the limelight once again. Backlash: a new generation of fans who don't have the luxury or retrospect of growing up with Dookie (1994). If you're pushing 30, like myself, I'd steer clear of any Green Day concert, least you want to spend the night amongst a sea of 13-year-old kids and their I'm-still-cool or grumpy parents.

Clocking in at over an hour, 21st Century Breakdown is the longest release in Green Day's catalog. Who's responsible for not equipping Billie Joe Armstrong with the butcher's cleaver for a little fat-trimming? Tracks 4 through 7 are intended for character development in this Punk Rock Opera, but only serve as filler before you get to the juicy plot-thickeners. "East Jesus Nowhere" (protesting organized religion) shines through with a real sense of Anti-Establishment attitude. The fast-paced "Peacemaker", primarily driven by acoustic guitars, adds a much-needed extra dimension in a style we haven't seen from the boys since 2000's Warning.

It takes 13 tracks before we get the album's best track, "Horseshoes And Handgrenades". Armstrong's growling vocals and signature Power Chord guitar riff are sure to make it a head-bobbing crowd-pleaser. Track 16, "21 Guns" is something to look forward to, but by then you've realize 21st Century Breakdown's so-called concept has drowned in a slew of songs that are far too similar to one another. "I don't want to loose my sights", Armstrong sings on "See The Light"; I'd hate to break it to you, Billie Joe, but I think this time around you have.

SPEAK: Have I been spoiled by Swiss Modern Design (design at its purest and most minimal form)? Minimalism is a backlash to gaudy ornamentation, ornamentation revolts against the elite of minimalism, destruction breeds creation, and around and around we go. Chris Bilheimer and Green Day implore too little too late; nothing new or surprising from either artist.





ALBUM GRAD - D
ARTWORK GRAD - F
DO WE HAVE A FIT - YES

No comments:

Post a Comment