|
|
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Inspiring, April 2, 2004
By A Customer
I'm not a "punk", and guess that my life is actuially made up of some of the things Operation Ivy rails against most fervently, but I wanted to testify on behalf of this album, which is one of the best, most vital, and inspiring records I own. I listen to it probably two or three times a day at work while poring over financial data, after work at the gym, and at home on headphones. The music itself is much more sophisticated than most of the stuff that passes for punk, but what really blows me away are the lyrics, which are poetic and insightful--especially mind-blowing considering the band members, and Jesse Michaels, were like nineteen years old when they wrote the album--and tackle real life issues and choices at street level, such as the phoniness of the 9 to 5, the phoniness of a macho, "tough guy" attitude, the inhumanity of violence and insensitivity, the crassness of overconsumption, and the need to break through destructive, self-imposed, conformist patterns in your life. All of this, plus an obvious joy and reverence for music-making and music-listening as paths to freedom, and identifiable, skeptical, well-formed politics. And sung in such a way that it's all intelligible, so you don't have to read the lyrics to know what the songs are driving at. To me, it's one of few, rare albums that mix politics, catchiness, and the positivity that people need to feed off of to change their lives, live ethically, honestly, and thoughtfully. Not a lot of other bands/groups spring to mind when I say that: the Clash, Blackalicious, Anti-Flag, Bright Eyes, Minor Threat, Neil Young, Nas (Illmatic) a few others. Anyway... Have also heard a few Common Rider songs on some the Plea for Peace compilations, and am anxious to check them out more in-depth. Now's the time, at least in my life, that I want conscience, consciousness, and positivity in the music I pump into my head twelve hours a day, and Operation Ivy delivers all of that and more.
|