
Leo & Co. still hate the war, love big rock.
Ted Leo And The Pharmicists - Living With The Living
[4/5] Ah, the difficult fourth album-pharmacist Ted Leo, drummer Chris Wilson and bassist Dave Lerner continue the drive for a pop that is ultimately punk. Still informed by melodic Brit outfits like the Jam and Stiff Little Fingers, Living With The Living takes steps back to New Jersey, with the sort of big rock 'n' roll, free of subcultural claim, that'd make the Boss proud ("Army Bound," "The World Stops Turning"). Living's most memorable moments, however, come when the band break from the standard format. "The Unwanted Things" nods to early reggae (invoking Foregone Conclusion's "Equality Street"), while the frenzied, Thin Lizzy-esque "The Sons Of Cain" demands repeat plays and sing-alongs. From the massive "Annunciation Day/Born On Christmas Day" (think an electrified Pogues), to the acoustic nostalgia of "A Bottle Of Buckie" and the infectious tell-all of "C.I.A." ("Only you know what you've done," sings Leo), the Pharmacist camp proves relevant and in fine form. (TOUCH AND GO) Mike McKee
Official Website: http://www.tgrec.com
|
Also in this issue:
- Good Charlotte
- The Queers
- Bayside
- The Boils
- Nothington
- Big D And The Kids Table
- Relient K
- Signal To Noise
- Sounds Like Violence
- Explosions In The Sky
- Aereogramme
- Air
- Arcade Fire
- Aqualung
- Between The Trees
- Clair De Lune
- Daphne Loves Derby
- The Nein
- Seafood
- Maria Taylor
- Comeback Kid
- Alabama Thunderpussy
- Autonym
- Big Business
- Daggermouth
- The End
- The Handshake Murders
- Life In Your Way
- Otep
- Since The Flood
- xDEATHSTARx
- Lovedrug
- Jesse Malin
- The Agency
- Call Me Lightning
- The Higher
- Kaddisfly
- Kingfield
- RTX
- Son Volt
- Southern Culture On The Skids
- The Stooges
- RJD2
- !!!
- Daníel Ágúst
- Dälek
- Brother Ali
- LCD Soundsystem
- Skinny Puppy
- Other sections...





























[4/5] Ah, the difficult fourth album-pharmacist Ted Leo, drummer Chris Wilson and bassist Dave Lerner continue the drive for a pop that is ultimately punk. Still informed by melodic Brit outfits like the Jam and Stiff Little Fingers, Living With The Living takes steps back to New Jersey, with the sort of big rock 'n' roll, free of subcultural claim, that'd make the Boss proud ("Army Bound," "The World Stops Turning"). Living's most memorable moments, however, come when the band break from the standard format. "The Unwanted Things" nods to early reggae (invoking Foregone Conclusion's "Equality Street"), while the frenzied, Thin Lizzy-esque "The Sons Of Cain" demands repeat plays and sing-alongs. From the massive "Annunciation Day/Born On Christmas Day" (think an electrified Pogues), to the acoustic nostalgia of "A Bottle Of Buckie" and the infectious tell-all of "C.I.A." ("Only you know what you've done," sings Leo), the Pharmacist camp proves relevant and in fine form. (TOUCH AND GO) Mike McKee
Official Website: 
