The Gaslight Anthem’s Get Hurt… Surprisingly and Pleasantly Painful…

The Gaslight Anthem’s Get Hurt… Surprisingly and Pleasantly Painful…

Gaslight_Anthem_Get_Hurt

ALBUM REVIEW: Brian Fallon, frontman for the Gaslight Anthem (GLA), always spoke in interviews of what to musically expect with each new upcoming GLA album.  Ironically, every time he declared the band was taking their sound in a bold, new direction, they delivered yet another kick ass collection of familiar “punk-n-roll soul” with gritty, Ness meets Petty vocals.

The Gaslight Anthem Get Hurt Album Review

This time around discussing Get Hurt, their fifth full length release, Fallon spoke about the wonder of some bands that drastically changed their sound and live to talk about it, a very risky move that often doesn’t end pretty for rock bands.  Get Hurt is by no means Achtung Baby or Kid A but for GLA it is.  Unlike their peers in the National and the Hold Steady, both recently releasing great but “safe” albums, in efforts to reach the next level of rockdom, it seems GLA courageously  said “fuck that” and decided to shake things up a bit.  The Garden State darlings finally kept their word, grew a pair and took the plunge, interestingly at a time when they too are eyeing that same rockdom and should play it safe.  Audacious?  Ballsy?  Yup…I agree.

Quite simply, Get Hurt is far more rock and far less punk, more Petty and less Ness,  full of ambitious, stadium size anthems with the band trying to live up to their very name. Sure you have the traditional punkish ferocity of “Rollin’ And Tumblin” that still packs a similar punch like “1930” does on their 2007 debut album Sink or Swim or “Orphans” on 2012’s American Slang, but is also the closest “typical” GLA song on the entire album and smack right in the middle of the playlist, reminding their fans that they didn’t forget where they come from and still punk as fuck. The intriguing title track sounds like a scrubbed up, leftover Horrible Crowes (Fallon’s side project, check out their excellent debut record, Elsie) number that is just begging for radio play. Other standout tracks include “1,000 Years,” “Helter Skeleton,” “Selected Poems” “Stay Vicious” and “Dark Places” (my favorite track thus far).

But yet again, perhaps both GLA and their fans should have seen it coming since it isn’t like the band didn’t flirt with different ground before .  Mixing punk driven rock with 50’s sha la la’s and 60’s R&B groove has been constant in their music since 2008’s The 59 Sound (their second full length release).  Or check out the Cure-ish “Old White Lincoln “on the same album.  Then try listening to “Get Hurt” and “Here Comes My Man” from 2012’s Handwritten back to back.  Pretty complimentary if you ask me.  One could even argue that the band has already been mildly indulging in experimentation with 2008’s Senor and the Queen EP since the recording has a much different, almost disjointed feel to it despite decent songs (especially “Blue Jeans and White T-Shirts.”).

Overall Get Hurt is a solid effort and, I will say it again,  a ballsy move by a band whose engines have been noticeably sputtering a tad bit on their last 2 releases.  If you are looking for the blue collar punk of the past you may be let down but I am kind of relieved GLA sound has pleasantly aged and matured from the first time I saw them at Asbury Park’s Stone Pony on their 59 Sound tour and from the New Brunswick basement scene where they hatched. Will GLA fans get hurt with this new release?  If you grow a pair, dive in like the band did maybe you will suffer some scrapes or a bruise at most…and pleasantly so.

Give this a like Facehookers.