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Chris Fallon
10/05/09, 02:57 PM
Strike Anywhere - Iron Front
Release Date: September 6, 2009
Record Label: Bridge Nine Records

As an avid baseball fan, I am proud to declare Ichiro Suzuki of my beloved Seattle Mariners as one of the finest, most reliable players in the game. His strategy could be seen as almost superstitiously repetitive, however it works for him. He continues to crank out record numbers, and his statistics are above nearly every other major leaguer out there. You see, even when he has a "down year," you believe his traditional strategy will break his rut and put him back where he belongs. Never seems to fail us loyalists.

Like Ichiro, Strike Anywhere has been around now for awhile, always sticking with the same basic aggressive formula of chaotic melodies over Thomas Barnett's impassioned cries. Essentially, the band has remained a viable fabric in the melodic hardcore stitching, like a more articulate Goldfinger and if Rise Against were still pissed off. For their long-anticipated Bridge Nine debut, Iron Front, one would expect Strike Anywhere to heed their Jade Tree momentum and seize the day on a group of songs built on the platform of dominating punk rock. Blame it on said reliability, but on LP number four, Strike Anywhere has flatlined.

Part of the problem is the need for variance, as Brian McTernan steps in to produce once more. Like John Feldmann with Goldfinger, it stymies a band's sound and halts the occurrence of any advancement or growth. Iron Front is a title that rings with bitter anger, but stalls after only a few songs due to how little everything divides itself. At just under 30 minutes, it's important for a band to skip over how fast everything is and focus on some finesse as well -- and after three previously entries that are some of the most stirringly powerful melodic hardcore you'll ever lay ears on, Iron Front is a dire disappointment. Hell, two of the best tracks the band recorded during these sessions were put on the "teaser" EP!

After the double-strike of "Invisible Colony" and "I'm Your Opposite Number," everything else begins blending together -- and honestly, after several two-minute ragers in a row, it becomes difficult to remember which song is which. Sure, "Summerpunks" is a blazing pop-punk scorcher, and "Last Will and Testament" survives on the power of Barnett's honest delivery, but despite some hints of sunlight, this is a record without much life to it. After all, Barnett is still a dedicated songwriter and hearing him scream "Fuck no" on "Hand of Glory" makes you tremble with a smidgen of pleasure. Lest we forget how truly talented the band behind him are: Eric Kane continues to pulverize the drumkit, but new guitarist Matt Smith isn't given any time to show what he can bring to the table. Garth Petrie and Mark Miller walk a familiar line here, and it feels like McTernan's production -- while normally lovely -- is going through the motions on this record (this is, after all, their fourth record working with him).

Strike Anywhere is a band that has yet to overstay their welcome and can make a better record than this; Dead FM proved that even with a label switch, they could maintain the integral core of their organic & abrasive sound. All we have here are thirteen tracks that just leapfrog each other without any commitment. Consider bringing a new producer aboard, and you've got your return to form -- but after three long years, Iron Front is a miracle in poor execution and fails to gather any true grit from a hardcore sound that offers little to no separation between itself. We all hit our slumps, and Strike Anywhere have yet to show any reason as to why recovery is not an option.

Rise Against; Strung Out; No Trigger; Smoke or Fire"Last Will and Testament," "Summerpunks" and "Invisible Colony"

1. Invisible Colony
2. I'm Your Opposite Number
3. South Central Beach Party
4. Failed State
5. Hand of Glory
6. The Crossing
7. Spectacular
8. Blackbirds Roar
9. Omega Footprint
10. Summerpunks
11. First Will and Testament
12. Western Scale
13. Postcards From HomeThomas Barnett: vocals
Matt Smith: guitar/vocals
Garth Petrie: bass
Eric Kane: drums
Mark Miller: guitar/vocals

Official Site (http://www.strikeanywhere.org) | Official Myspace (http://www.myspace.com/strikeanywhere)Amazon MP3 (http://www.amazon.com/Iron-Front/dp/B002QDSJ3E/ref=dm_ap_alb6)

Matthew Tsai
10/05/09, 08:02 PM
Love love love this album despite the genericness of it.

Justin_stacy
10/05/09, 08:42 PM
such a boring repetitive disappointment. i seriously can't believe as a band this is the path they wanted after Dead FM.

should beg Fatty to take them back.

Chris Fallon
10/05/09, 08:48 PM
such a boring repetitive disappointment. i seriously can't believe as a band this is the path they wanted after Dead FM.

should beg Fatty to take them back.
And get Bill Stevenson to produce? I would really like to hear what they could do with somebody else behind the boards.

Chalie22
10/06/09, 12:30 AM
Wow this record is way better than Dead FM. The band really bounced back nicely and wrote a good catchy record.

SilverWings
10/06/09, 06:02 AM
I really disliked Dead FM, hopefully this one brings me back into SA.

The Marc
10/06/09, 06:37 AM
Respectfully disagree, this is possibly their best album - the middle drags a tiny bit, but picks it up in the end.

futurebreed
10/06/09, 06:38 AM
I personally think this album is way better than Dead FM. Just saw them last night, and it sounds great live too

robdobi
10/06/09, 06:42 AM
the years gone by got a better review than this? c'mon.

Alex DiVincenzo
10/06/09, 07:07 AM
Fair review. Too much sameness on this album, unfortunately.

simplelivin_GCH
10/06/09, 07:24 AM
i love it.....beats out Dead FM for me

ReedAreTheUnion
10/06/09, 07:30 AM
Totally disagree. Top 5 of the year material in my opinion.
This record carries a completely different tone than any other SA record, but absolutely still sounds like them. Same reason I really liked the new Taking Back Sunday record (that everyone seemed to hate).
The last few songs are so huge, unlike anything they've ever done. Even the two b-sides from the EP are among their strongest material.

prefix-core
10/06/09, 07:49 AM
And get Bill Stevenson to produce? I would really like to hear what they could do with somebody else behind the boards.
Yes, yes, yes, and yes! Blasting Room + Bill Stevenson solves all.

prefix-core
10/06/09, 07:50 AM
This album is growing on me a little bit, but as mentioned -- lacks the "bite" of their previous records. That being said? I can't wait to watch them play "Chorus of One" and "Infrared" at the Fest this year!

CellarGhosts
10/06/09, 08:31 AM
Yes, yes, yes, and yes! Blasting Room + Bill Stevenson solves all.
It's true. Bill Stevenson is a god amongst men.

Anyway, more or less agree with this review. Dead FM is far better, but I think they can still bounce back. This album's a disappointment but it is still enjoyable.

prefix-core
10/06/09, 08:34 AM
It's true. Bill Stevenson is a god amongst men.

Anyway, more or less agree with this review. Dead FM is far better, but I think they can still bounce back. This album's a disappointment but it is still enjoyable.
I think the issue most everyone has with the record isn't that it's "bad," it's that it's mediocre. And just sort of lacks a certain "oomph" or "holy shit!" vibe that the others had.

That's something they can get back easily. I'm a believer!

CellarGhosts
10/06/09, 08:36 AM
I think the issue most everyone has with the record isn't that it's "bad," it's that it's mediocre. And just sort of lacks a certain "oomph" or "holy shit!" vibe that the others had.
Exactly how I feel about it. It's good but as a Strike Anywhere album it lacks that certain "oomph" that they've always had.

johnnylcd
10/06/09, 08:53 AM
Exactly how I feel about it. It's good but as a Strike Anywhere album it lacks that certain "oomph" that they've always had.
yeah, this. i'll always love his lyrics

JTMcKrackles
10/06/09, 09:49 AM
Well written review, but I disagree with the score. I loved this album.

Frinet
10/06/09, 10:10 AM
ehhh still pumped to listen...

isae
10/06/09, 10:29 AM
this is way better than dead FM. ist pretty good actually. generic? hey: it's strike anywhere. if i wanted to listen to a band with another sound, i would listen to a band with another sound.

mybreakingpoint
10/06/09, 11:18 AM
i only found a little boring, but i'm still enjoying it considerably.

Merkin
10/06/09, 02:18 PM
album much better than 68

Chris Fallon
10/06/09, 03:08 PM
the years gone by got a better review than this? c'mon.
They're different records and different bands -- judging merely by the score is unfair.

mht
10/06/09, 10:25 PM
how the fuck does that god awful PBC album get an 84 and this gets a 68? That PBC album was a giant untalented display of putrid crap. Yes this album is generic, and yes the b9 bug got to both albums production wise, but this is far better.I could get a bum off the street to play guitar better than whats on Chasing Hamburg

Poochemist
10/10/09, 02:54 PM
Every time I buy a new Strike Anywhere album, I think "wow this sounds the same," but at the same time I begin to love it just as much as their older works. I've been listening to this band since the Chorus of One EP, and I think my biggest disappointment was upon hearing Exit English. The first several songs are all in the same key and show little variation from each other. I definitely grew to love the album, but it took a while.

Iron Front doesn't suffer from the same problems, at least for me. Good order to the tracks- they're varied, yet still what you'd expect from Strike Anywhere. I think this album deserved a much more positive review than what it got.

That being said, I'd be interested to hear these guys with a different producer. I don't know what Bill Stevenson could do, since imo, the quality of his output has matched, not necessarily exceeded that of Brian McTernan. I'm just surprised that Strike Anywhere hasn't tried to commit to a slight direction change and that they've been happy with how they've been for the past 10 years. As long as they keep putting out quality stuff, I couldn't care less where they go.

skatfree
10/14/09, 02:52 AM
this album is among the best this year.

Chris Fallon
10/14/09, 03:20 AM
Every time I buy a new Strike Anywhere album, I think "wow this sounds the same," but at the same time I begin to love it just as much as their older works. I've been listening to this band since the Chorus of One EP, and I think my biggest disappointment was upon hearing Exit English. The first several songs are all in the same key and show little variation from each other. I definitely grew to love the album, but it took a while.

Iron Front doesn't suffer from the same problems, at least for me. Good order to the tracks- they're varied, yet still what you'd expect from Strike Anywhere. I think this album deserved a much more positive review than what it got.

That being said, I'd be interested to hear these guys with a different producer. I don't know what Bill Stevenson could do, since imo, the quality of his output has matched, not necessarily exceeded that of Brian McTernan. I'm just surprised that Strike Anywhere hasn't tried to commit to a slight direction change and that they've been happy with how they've been for the past 10 years. As long as they keep putting out quality stuff, I couldn't care less where they go.
Well said. I'm a big fan of their previous releases, I simply find this stale in comparison as reviewing it as part of their catalog and stand-alone, it does nothing to catch nor keep my attention. Nothing against the band, I just believe they are capable of better. Just a disappointment for me.

J.Dick
10/16/09, 07:43 AM
This is better than Dead FM.

You know...it is funny how a band gets damned if they change their sound too much and damned if they don't change it enough. Bill Stevenson has produced all of the Teenage Bottlerocket (who I love) albums and they all sound pretty much the same (and are all awesome). Most bands have a core sound...they may stray a bit but they are defined by that sound.

I say Strike Anywhere have made their best record since Change is a Sound.

willvc
10/16/09, 09:09 AM
I bought this a couple hours after hearing one song. I love this CD, I agree that the middle drags a little bit but it's hardly boring. Great CD.

newdesign
10/19/09, 12:48 AM
This is better than Dead FM.

You know...it is funny how a band gets damned if they change their sound too much and damned if they don't change it enough. Bill Stevenson has produced all of the Teenage Bottlerocket (who I love) albums and they all sound pretty much the same (and are all awesome). Most bands have a core sound...they may stray a bit but they are defined by that sound.

I say Strike Anywhere have made their best record since Change is a Sound.
Honestly, since this is (regrettably) the first Strike Anywhere record I've heard, I feel that my opinion could offer some light. I am fucking dumbfounded and keep asking "where has this band been all my life?" Tsk. And I say I like hardcore...sad.

I bought this album on Friday at Rasputin's in Berekeley and I haven't been able to stop listening (and I bought goddamn good albums that day (Volcano Choir--Unmap; even a used copy of Saul Williams' Amethyst Rock Star, for god's sake). But Strike Anywhere has dominated my headphones and car stereo--I simply can't get enough.

For my "first album" of theirs, I couldn't have picked a bigger, faster, harder popper of a cherry. I think this album is flawless the more I listen. And I get it: it's punk. It's not supposed to be genre-shattering or mindblowing. This isn't Radiohead or Brand New or Justin Vernon. But this is good. It's goddamned good. I want to go get my left arm sleeved up and gauge my ears bigger. I want to drink PBR's and smoke a fatty and most the shit out of a show. And start a revolution with a burning American flag and piss on the ashes.

Viva.

Also, "First Will and Testament" is the only punk song that has actually got my foggy-eyed. Beautiful. And the lyrics are poetry. Give this shit to Bob Dylan and said "top that, bitch."