Four years after their breakthrough sophomore effort, New Orleans hardcore punk outfit Pears return with their self-titled third album. While not a complete reinvention -- as the title would suggest -- Pears is a step forward in maturity and songcraft, a collection of hard-hitting and melodic anthems that sound like the artsy hardcore of Fucked Up colliding with the disillusionment and frustration from Green Day's "Longview," then punched in the face by the bloody knuckles of an unwashed and grimy fist. Raw and raucous, the ...
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Four years after their breakthrough sophomore effort, New Orleans hardcore punk outfit Pears return with their self-titled third album. While not a complete reinvention -- as the title would suggest -- Pears is a step forward in maturity and songcraft, a collection of hard-hitting and melodic anthems that sound like the artsy hardcore of Fucked Up colliding with the disillusionment and frustration from Green Day's "Longview," then punched in the face by the bloody knuckles of an unwashed and grimy fist. Raw and raucous, the album surprises with lyrical substance and emotional depth, a reflective and hopeless pain coursing beneath the simplicity of the songs themselves. Frontman Zach Quinn is the heart of it all, his vocals delivering whiplash to each track with crazed screams, lightning-speed fury, and passionate pleading for anything but this life. On "Nervous," he's resigned to fate, singing "I don't wanna be angry/but I'll never feel open again" and later, on "Daughter," he cries, "I'll never have a daughter/and I'll never fall in love." Facing inevitable aging with aplomb, he realizes, "I never considered I'd survive my liver/just to worry about my knees" on "Traveling Time." Despite the miserable introspection -- in typical Pears fashion -- they execute everything with a biting wit that prevents this collection from plunging into woe-is-me misery territory (interpolated '90s one-hit wonders "Tubthumping" and the "Macarena" even find their ways into the mix). On the ode to bed, "Naptime," Quinn quips "I am a king/but I sleep in a twin" as the band -- Brian Pretus, Erich Goodyear, and Jarret Nathan -- rages at breakneck speed. From the loser anthem "Zero Wheels" to the woes of living month-to-month ("Rich to Rags") and the dangers of self-sabotaging ("Killing Me"), Pears offers an endless selection of relatable content, shining a light on depression, fear, self-esteem, and mortality. For all the talk of being dredged from the pits of society, Pears are so endearing and charming that they at least make hard living sound bearable. Delivering a jolt of energy with a side of harsh truth, Pears finds the quartet at the top of their game. ~ Neil Z. Yeung, Rovi
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Add this copy of Pears to cart. $18.18, new condition, Sold by Importcds rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sunrise, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2020 by Fat Wreck Chords.
Add this copy of Pears to cart. $20.67, new condition, Sold by newtownvideo rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from huntingdon valley, PA, UNITED STATES, published 2020 by Fat Wreck Chords.
Add this copy of Pears to cart. $33.27, new condition, Sold by Revaluation Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Exeter, DEVON, UNITED KINGDOM, published 2020 by Fat Wreck Chords.