November 21, 2003

MACCA


Album Review: Blink 182

BLINK-182
By DARRYL STERDAN



BLINK-182
Blink-182
(Geffen/Universal)

For a decade, SoCal trio Blink-182 have pretended to be the Peter Pans of pop-punk -- the boys who just wouldn't grow up.

They filled their CDs with juvenile jokes and puerile puns. They made videos with porn stars. Their idea of deep thought was What's My Age Again? But like a lot of arrested adolescents, they were just living in denial. And like a lot of class (and classless) clowns, they used their crunchy pop and crusty humour to hide their soft, sensitive centres.

Lately, though, something has changed. Maybe it's their advancing ages. Or their recent side projects like Box Car Racer and Transplants. But on their self-titled sixth CD, something has convinced the Blinkers to stop acting the fool and start acting like men.

The 14 tracks on Blink-182 are the threesome's most serious and honest songs to date. They're also their most original -- instead of the pumping punk cliches, silly singalongs and sugar-buzz harmonies of old, these cuts are based around personal lyrics that engage your heart, intelligent songcraft that engages your brain and creative production that engages your ears.

The Blinkers don't totally abandon their skateboard roots, but they do deliberately and proudly broaden their technical and creative horizons on ambitious cuts like Stockholm Syndrome and I'm Lost Without You, incorporating both the textured artiness of post-punk and the keening, roiling intensity of emo in a quest for distinction and originality.

It's too bad it took them 10 years to get to this point. But it's nice to see they finally did. Welcome to adulthood, guys.

Track Listing
1. Feeling This
2. Obvious
3. I Miss You
4. Violence
5. Stockholm Syndrome
6. Down
7. The Fallen Interlude
8. Go
9. Asthenia
10. Always
11. Easy Target
12. All of This
13. Here's Your Letter
14. I'm Lost Without You
 


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