Search

Happy Holidays
 
 

Indie-Rock-In-A-Box

Vinyl Club

Staff Picks

Gift Guide

Gift Cards

Free Shipping

 
 

New Releases

Top Sellers

Pre-Orders

Downloads

Vinyl

TShirts

Posters

Gifts

Lists

Insound 20

Bargain Bin

Help

Shopping Cart

 

Items

0

Total

$0.00
 

View Cart
Check Out
 
 

Ipod Boombox??!!

Ipod Boombox??!!

Syndicate Us

Read About RSS
 

Live It Out (CD)

Metric

[Cover]

Label:
Released: 2005 List Price: 41.98
Price: $39.88  
 
 
add to cart

In an effort to prove Metric frontwoman Emily Haines was not the only dominating personality behind the Canadian indie rock group's first album, Old World Underground, Where Are You Now?, the second album hammers home the fact that it's more of a group effort. Production duties were handed to guitarist James Shaw and Haines' trademark synths take a back seat to screeching guitars and more cohesive playing as a quartet. Despite the added punk rock punch the guitar gives, the bite of their debut is dulled by a weaker set of songs, with only minor aesthetic changes to mask the slight sophomoric slump. Live It Out desires to be a major step forward (Emily Haines would release her first solo album, Knives Don't Have Your Back, a year later), but the best moments on the album are the ones that recapture what made the debut such a compelling piece of '80s retro -- showcasing Haines' trademark keyboards and her effective cooing vocals, which manage to sound both cloyingly sexy and gutturally raw at the same time. "Poster of a Girl" transforms a few rudimentary French lyrics and an unassuming keyboard intro into a spacy, groovy dance track. "The Police and the Private" is an effectively simple and haunting keyboard-heavy song that shows Haines' best vocal performances are the down to earth ones (something she thankfully discovered on her solo album). As with Old World Underground, Haines has a tendency for collegiate-level prose when the band gets political, and songs like the "Combat Baby" knockoff "Handshakes" have a smug, elitist attitude about them, without providing much insight into their political beliefs. The first single, the hooky "Monster Hospital," is a light-hearted punk song with great non-sequitur lyrics, but the overdubbed guitars and big production typically reserved for an alternative rock album don't fight the overall motif of Live It Out. There's a reason Haines was featured on the cover of Old World Underground and it's possibly this: she's what separates Metric from other '80s revivalist groups. ~ Erik Leijon, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1Empty
2Glass Ceiling
3Hand$hake$
4Too Little Too Late
5Poster of a Girl
6Monster Hospital
7Patriarch on a Vespa
8Police and the Private
9Ending Start
10Live It Out

 

User Reviews

Do you already own this product and want to submit a review? Click here to submit your own review!

Weekly Newsletter

Sign Up
 

Radio Player

 
Los Campesinos!
"We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed"