Liam Carey reviews
Jimmy Eat World
Jimmy Eat World (UK Edition)
Distributed by
Dreamworks/SKG
Year: 2001
Rating: 8/10
Cat. No: 450 348-2
Track listing:
1. Salt Sweat Sugar
2. A Praise Chorus
3. The Middle
4. Your House
5. Sweetness
6. Hear You Me
7. If You Don't, Don't
8. Get It Faster
9. Cautioners
10. The Authority Song
11. My Sundown
Ten years on from the apex of grunge ,
there is a new breed of come-as-you-are
US band dominating the alt.rock landscape. Some, such as Nickelback , are
currently as ubiquitous as they are interminably tedious, while the fratboy
likes of Blink 182 slug it out with Papa Roach for the Highschool vote, and
only the prospect of a limited shelf life to look forward to. It's become the
soundtrack for endless teen movies and TV series, none of which are complete
without the sound of angst-ridden whiny vocals pitted against an invigorated
guitar and drums onslaught.
Jimmy Eat World fit in with this particular phenomenon, but they have more to
offer than most. Rather than subscribe to the quiet/loud/quiet/loud (ad
infinitum) approach that Kurt Cobain patented over a decade ago, Jimmy Eat
World's songs are, beneath the occasionally grunge-lite trappings, cut from
the same taut, economic powerpop cloth that made The Police such a force in
the late 1970s and early 1980s, and which Goo Goo Dolls have also
appropriated in recent years.
While Salt Sweat Sugar (a.k.a. Bleed American , the title track of this album
in its original, pre-September 11 incarnation) and Get It Faster blend in
perfectly with the stereotypical intensity of their grungier peers, it's the
pure melodic rush of The Middle, If You Don't Don't and Your House that best
showcase their neo-new wave strengths, and way with a winning tune.
A dozen tracks in that vein, however, would soon lose its appeal, and luckily
Jimmy Eat World has a handful of downtempo gems that, if anything, surpass
the blasts of powerpop. Hear You Me, Cautioners , and the closing My Sundown
are lovely things, laced with chiming guitars and the celestial melancholia
that characterises the best by Goo Goo Dolls. Indeed, these three songs are
right up there alongside Iris and Black Balloon , eclipsing anything on the
Goo Goo's below-par Gutterflower album from earlier this year.
Clocking in at a fat-free 45 minutes, with a straightforwardly effective
cover of John Mellencamp 's Authority Song to augment their own compositions,
Jimmy Eat World is a supreme example of modern pop-rock.
Feeling hungry? Satisfy yourself with this.
Review copyright © Liam Carey, 2002.
E-mail Liam Carey
[Up to the top of this page]
Amazon.co.uk Widgets
DVDfever .co.uk - Est. February 25th 2000
As of April 2009, Blu-rays and DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TH-37PX80B
37" Plasma TV with a Sony BDP-1500 Blu-ray player and played through a Yamaha DSP-AX820 amplifier.
PC games reviewed by the editor are on:
Since Jan 2011: Intel Quad Core Dell XPS 8100, i7 CPU 860 @ 2.80Ghz, 8Gb RAM, nVidia GeForce GTS 240, Windows 7
Since Nov 2005: Intel Pentium D 830 3.0Ghz, 1Gb RAM, 128Mb nVidia GeForce 6700XL, Windows XP
Since Aug 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.66Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb GeForce4 MX440 graphics, Windows XP
Since May 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.6Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb ATI Radeon 9600TX graphics, Windows XP
Since Jun 2002: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, 64Mb ATI Radeon 8500LE
Since May 2000: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, Voodoo 3 3000 AGP