Monday 6 December 2010

Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys

   

     If you're going to base your opinions of 'Danger Days...' on My Chemical Romance's previous stuff, let me stop you right there: this is a totally different record. Previously, Gerard Way and Co were labelled a 'suicide cult' band, and if you admitted you were a fan of their music you were immediately labelled 'emo'. Yes, 'The Black Parade' was a brilliant album, but the hype around it created by the media (Andrew Levy's article for the Daily Mail in particular, blaming the band for a young girl's suicide) meant that the music was overlooked, and the band were blamed for the emo trend favoured by many teenagers at the time. 'Danger Days' however, is a totally different story.
    Gerard Way has always been a story teller; 'The Black Parade' told the story of a patient dying of cancer. 'Danger Days' is set in 2019, the story told by 'Dr Death', who features at the start of the record (the voice actually creeped me out a little bit...) and other characters such as S/C/A/R/E/C/R/O/W, Party Poison, Jet-Star and The Cobra Kid appear on the album.
     If there was one statement I could make to sum up the album, it would be that these songs were recorded to be heard live. Drum machines you need to jump along to, lyrics that were just meant to be sung along to, this is an album to be played live. 'Planetary (GO!)' is just one of these anthems, although it's totally different to any other MCR song you've heard before (synths, wtf?!), it's MASSIVE. Way punches out lyrics like "Kill the party with me - and never go home!", and listening to it makes you want to be at one of their gigs along with the rest of the MCRmy. 'Party Poison' is another one for the festivals and live audiences - "Ain't a DJ gonna save my soul, I sold it long ago for rock 'n' roll" pretty much sums up the song.
     Luckily, they've announced a February arena tour, which means you've got plenty of time to learn all the lyrics.
     If you're looking for a song like 'I Don't Love You', or 'Disenchanted', you've bought the wrong album. The closest thing you'll get is probably 'The Kids From Yesterday', but even then it's still very far away from the stuff on 'The Black Parade'. Probably due to the fact they've used synths again. Don't get me wrong, the synths work well, but they're one of the most obvious differences between 'Danger Days' and MCR's previous stuff. Not a bad difference at all though.
     'Danger Days' is easily one of the biggest albums of 2010, so expect a lot from the band in 2011 - they're not going anywhere soon. It's clear the band had a lot of fun making the record, as it comes across on the record, but there's still that distinct MCR feel to it. It's still the same band, just having more fun. Which is really what the album is about.

For fans of: The Used, Green Day
Rating: 9/10

2 comments:

  1. Hannah,
    Brilliant review. Really liked the comments about musicality/use of different recording techniques. Makes the review seem much more authoritative than most of the others on this CD. Great structure, insightful and perceptive comments. Will you focus on a particular genre or will future reviews be wide ranging? Delighted there will be no review of Cher's new CD (or hopefully any from X-Factor) - hope the sound of silence prevails. Looks like I'm your first follower - I predict a stampede! Bob

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  2. Thanks Bob!
    I'll be reviewing other genres, it really just depends what albums I come across and what ones I feel would make a good review.
    Thanks for the support :D

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