Motion City Soundtrack covers Pavement
Very well done cover I’d say.
Motion City Soundtrack covers Pavement
Very well done cover I’d say.
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Band: Motion City Soundtrack
Release: 1/10
Label: Columbia
1. “Worker Bee” – C
2. “A Lifeless Ordinary” – B-
3. “Her Words Destroyed My Planet” – C-
4. “Disappear” – C
5. “Delirium” – C-
6. “History Lesson” – C+
7. “Stand Too Close” – C+
8. “Pulp Fiction” – C
9. “@!#?@!” – C-
10. “Hysteria” – D+
11. “Skin and Bones” – C+
12. “The Weakends” – C
Comments: My initiation with MCS came in 2006 when I first heard “Everything Is Alright” on MLB 06 The Show and to be honest I had forgotten about the band entirely until the other night when a kind girl brought them up. Not going to lie I did dig that song. This was back when the band was independent (they signed to Columbia for this record after previously being on Epitaph), but that doesn’t really matter anyway. “Everything” was pretty much pure pop-punk, but not really the obnoxious kind that I find myself often rolling my eyeballs at, more in the vain of Head Automatica than Fall Out Boy or whatever other boring fucks exist in that genre. Also, not going to lie, I didn’t really have a good vibe about this release. No, not because it’s the band’s first album since selling out, but because I only liked them because of one song. Okay so the real talk, the real deal is that this is pretty solid, but nothing special. I can see it appeal to a variety of sensibilities including those termbros who might be fearful of the production quality on this. This shit is clean as fuck, but I guess it veers off to sometimes experimental patterns. It’s a guilty pleasure. I don’t want to admit liking this shit, but it’s sort of hard to bad mouth it (even though it’s mostly cheesy and pretentious and all that good stuff that “rocker” girls like) like I want to. One thing I can’t do is refer to their earlier work and say they sacrificed their sound or what have you. Can’t do that. Another bit of perspective: what’s up with the lone standing bass line/vocals turning into full on explosions? Is that an exclusive pop-punk formula? The quirkiness kind of kills this for me. What was all right in the beginning is a bit old news by the end.
Grade: C (74)