REVIEWS: BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE - [ALBUM]

Broken Social Scene - [Album] PHOTO
ARTIST: Broken Social Scene - [Album]
with free mp3 download for 'World Sick' from Forgiveness Rock Record by Broken Social Scene.
DATE: 05-15-10
REVIEW BY: Bill Adams
ALBUM: Forgiveness Rock Record
LABEL: Arts & Crafts


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Now Playing: 'Texico Bitches' from Forgiveness Rock Record by Broken Social Scene

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Now that the band has managed to keep a consistent schedule of releases and touring for a decade, made an international name for itself and almost singe-handedly reignited interest in Canadian rock outside of domestic borders, it's safe enough to look on Broken Social Scene as an established brand unto itself. That being the case, it's also safe to ask how it happened that the group came into its position at the top of the Canadian New Rock heap.

It's funny, but it's actually difficult to tell. Broken Social Scene started out as a side-project and additional outlet for a directory of players in more established bands including The Stars, Metric, Raising The Fawn, Treble Charger, KC Additional, hHead and By Divine Right as well as a cadre of solo artists like Lesley Fiest, Jason Collett and Andrew Whiteman. Each of these (now institutions) had careers of their own, but Broken Social Scene was something else to do that filled down time between recording and touring and it was fun for the players involved, so it stuck around. Now, it might not be fashionable to say it, but each of those aforementioned primary projects that the members of BSS were associated with were actually stronger bands but, because it was an easy hype machine to fuel (“All these guys are in this one band? WOW!”), it took off and became a tastemaking entity quickly; even if the “solo” bands and projects were better in the beginning.

While those “solo” records continue to be very good, Forgiveness Rock Record marks the first instance when BSS has surpassed them all. The individual members of Broken Social Scene have really come together with a focussed view of the project as a band this time; it's not just fun anymore, everyone is together in where they want Forgiveness Rock Record to go. That doesn't mean the band has shucked all of the uniquely personal contributions and touchings that each member has brought into the record, just that they're all better integrated this time.

Listeners can mark the change in Broken Social Scene's approach from the moment “World Sick” fades in and bursts to life to open the record. It's incredible ho the unique sensibilities of each member factors in; there are obvious flecks of unusual percussive motifs inherent to Whiteman's Apostle Of Hustle, the sweet indie soul Brendan Canning exposed on Something For All Of Us, the mildly electronic rock of Kevin Drew's solo work and the rock trimmings of Collett and Crossingham. It's an enormous conglomeration, but it comes together so well and so easily that fans will be instantly satisfied and excited by what they're hearing.

And that's just the first song on the record.

The songs get stronger each time they grow more diverse from there. Throughout songs including “Art House Director,” “All to All,” “Sentimental X's,” and “Chase Scene,” Lesley Feist, Emily Haynes, Amy Millan, special guest and Pavement alumnus Spiral Stairs, Kevin Drew, Lisa Lobsinger, Andrew Whiteman and Brandon Canning all trade off on lead vocal turns but, surprisingly, listeners never get lost or confused by the changing dynamics and arrangements that come every time the band's make-up changes. The songs themselves seem to be universally accessible; everything rolls together smoothly and cleanly with a final effect that calls to mind both Bob Dylan's work with The Band and Sonic Youth all at once but isn't derivative either. It's an unlikely success on paper, but it is absolutely brilliant and a definitive exposition of the band's powers in practice.

Even as “Me and My Hand” closes out the record in delicate, aesthetically pristine tones, listeners will still be riding the adrenaline rush that hit them as soon as they realized that Broken Social Scene was riding clean and on all cylinders and be anxious for more. These fourteen songs are the strongest combined set (there aren't any that would be phenomenal, break-out singles, the album works best as a whole) that Broken Social Scene has ever assembled and released; it's a captivating process to listen to the band transition between different line-ups and arrangements but inspiring to witness them do it so fluidly. Simply said (and without meaning to gush), Forgiveness Rock Record is a revelation into the faculties of Broken Social Scene; here, the band is performing at a level that warrants the praise they've they've been so graciously afforded.

Artist:

www.brokensocialscene.ca/

www.myspace.com/brokensocialscene

Download:

Broken Social Scene – “World Sick” – Forgiveness Rock Record


Album:

Forgiveness Rock Record
is out now. Buy it here on Amazon .

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