01 Remedy
02 Trusty Chords
03 I Was On A Mountain
04 One Step To Slip
05 It's All Related
06 The Sense
07 Not For Anyone
08 Sweet Disasters
09 Alright For Now
10 We'll Say Anything We Want
11 Wayfarer
12 The End
It's their 2nd album at the Epitaph label, following up last year’s 'A Flight And A Crash'. That record dissatisfied a few of Hot Water Music's huge fan base, which have been joyed through the experience of probation in the songs however unhappy that the Hot Water Music they'd loved was displaced by a band that tuned much less distinctive and fewer focused. People will likely be interested to find out that Hot Water Music have made an album a bit more alike to their former albums in the Doghouse label, although one who utters the creative evolution through 'A Flight And A Crash'. It's slightly just a shocking album which will amuse and unite hardcore kids everywhere.
It's slightly clear that Hot Water Music use a unique tune. The funky rhythms implemented through the drummer and bassist appear to squabble with all the violent riffs of the 2 guitar players, and the untutored vocals appear to quarrel with each instruments and each other. It’s an outcome which takes a few getting utilized but something that works outrageously well.
The band turns out to tour untiring. The years consumed performing in tiny clubs around the world have made them stringent and ingenious, one thing that all the time comes throughout if you play a brand new Hot Water Music record. They sound impressed through this set of songs, which each has an attractive melody and enchanting lyrical theme. The design on the wordplay is usually abstruse, however there's a true talent in integrating frightful imagery with real human senses as the vocalists act here. The singers at all times accomplish as a couple (a method which has spawned many copycats and a number of the world's absolute best bands-Rydell and Hunter Gatherer have each used this taste to nice impact on their first records) and this provides to the tune's effect.
In an album as constantly outstanding as this one it's too complex to pick personal top points, but I’ll try. 'It's All Related' makes use of guitar effects in a identical style to the great Fugazi, however explodes right into a fetching refrain and guitar solo. You'll find nods against to Bad Religion and also ska in this track. It’s the track that comes closest to the sound of the earlier album, cruising among kinds at an alarming rate, however similarly it is probably the most targeted and direct music they have carried out of their career. The next track starts by the two guitarists soloing in tandem, a nod to eighty's metal which is roughly efficient in a quick burst. For a band which are hip underground scenesters they certain do hear various tacky stuff, however they not at all had a way of “cool”, fortunately, so couldn’t probably lose it.
'We’ll Say Anything We Want' belongs to the album's most musically developed tracks, and remembers the 'Fate’s Got A Driver' age of Chamberlain, with its numerous alterations of rhythm and sluggish burning melody.
Some would possibly say that the 'Caution' on the title indicates the truth that Hot Water Music have played it secure in making a hardcore record, instead of making over the experimentations of last year. Most, then again, will amuse that Hot Water Music are nonetheless absolutely pushing hardcore music in new way on 'Caution'. It is an album that supposed to be an enormous profitable achievement, and also one that is a creative victory. It’s elevating, but not at all overweening, it's distinguishing but not at all impracticable and it accentuates nods to a wide variety of influences without ever copying anyone. A fantastic album.
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Album Info Released Genre Length Label Producer | : : : : : | October 8, 2002 Punk rock, hard rock 36:22 Epitaph Brian McTernan |
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