ALKALINE TRIO
CRIMSON
Though the current world of Alkaline Trio is not nearly
as fraught with and fueled by drink and drama as in
the band's formative years, the making of the new Crimson
(out May 24 on Vagrant), was not without its share of
dark portents: Two bone-shattering skateboarding accidents,
one PunkVoter tour that failed to block the reelection
of George W. Bush… but oddly enough: No failed
relationships!
As a result Crimson stands as the most mature
and ambitious 13 songs Alkaline Trio has ever pushed
itself to create-with able guidance from producer Jerry
Finn (Green Day, Blink-182, Jawbreaker). From the ominous
piano and atmospherics opening of first single "Time
To Waste" to closing ballad "Smoke,"
not a moment or note is wasted as the familiar Trio
balance of darkness and melody on "Mercy Me,"
"Dethbed" and "The Poison" nestles
up against increasingly progressive tempos and arrangements
of "Burn" and "Satin," and the epic
true-to-life tales of Manson family member Sadie Mae
Glutz ("Sadie") and the West Memphis Three
("Prevent This Tragedy").
Alkaline Trio's legacy harkens back to 1997, when Matt
Skiba, a bike messenger from working class Chicago 'burb
McHenry, gave up the drums for the guitar and began
his quest for the perfect balance of lyrical hell and
pop heaven. He and fellow messenger / drummer Glenn
Porter and bassist Rob Doran would debut as Alkaline
Trio for the Sundials 7”. Dan Andriano replaced
Doran prior to the For Your Lungs Only EP, adding a
second voice and songwriting style that complemented
and contrasted with Skiba’s, and the signature
Alkaline Trio sound was born.
Two albums on indie Asian Man Records, Goddamnit
and Maybe I'll Catch Fire, followed in 1998 and
2000 respectively, punctuated by hard touring and yielding
to-this-day live favorites "Radio," "Nose
Over Tail" and the latter's title track. A self-titled
compilation of early singles, EPs, compilation tracks
and others odds 'n' ends followed later in 2000.
From Here To Infirmary was released in 2001,
marking both the Trio's Vagrant Records debut and the
addition of ex-Smoking Popes drummer Mike Felumlee to
the fold. Singles "Private Eye" and "Stupid
Kid" and staples "Crawl" and "Another
Innocent Girl" became instant classics to the exponentially
growing Alkaline Trio fan base that buoyed the record
into the top 200 and packed clubs and theaters, transforming
the band into a formidable worldwide draw.
The current Alkaline Trio line-up finally solidified
with 2003's Good Mourning, as Derek Grant came
aboard for the perfection of the Trio sonic identity
that had been evolving since '97. On the strength of
anti-mainstream anthem "We've Had Enough,"
the cloyingly bittersweet "All On Black,"
a yearning "100 Stories" and cautionary love
and death serials "Emma" and "This Could
Be Love," Good Mourning crashed into the
Top 40, saw the band's debuts on Late Night with
Conan O'Brien and The Late Show With David
Letterman, and received raves from Rolling
Stone, SPIN, Entertainment Weekly
and the cover of Alternative Press.
Crimson delivers on this promise in spades.
As "Time To Waste" builds from mounting menace
to a majestic and traumatic chorus and segues directly
into "The Poison," an Andriano barnburner
reminiscent in spirit of those I Lied My Face Off era
sides, though played with a fierce precision to which
the early Trio could only aspire. "Burn" updates
Skiba's songwriting acumen with twists and touches worthy
of vintage Sisters of Mercy and Depeche Mode, while
"Dethbed," "Mercy Me" and "Fall
Victim" find an ever maturing but still familiar
Alkaline Trio sound resurfacing like a long lost friend.
Just as Alkaline Trio were about to start recording
Crimson, Matt Skiba fractured his wrist skateboarding.
Though it was a minor break, and he was only in a cast
for three weeks, the break pushed back the Trio's recording
schedule and the pending album's release. After Skiba
healed, the band jumped into recording and, with the
help of producer Finn, finished in January '05. Skiba
was anxious to get back on his board (though an avid
skater since the age of ten, he had abandoned it for
three months in fear of injuring himself again and further
delaying the album's May 24th release). But, after 15
minutes, Skiba dropped into a pool and broke his left
arm.
Now finally healed, Skiba is anxious to get Alkaline Trio
back on the road. After all, the collective misfortunes
that may have hobbled lesser acts have only provided Alkaline
Trio with five studio albums worth of increasingly stronger
material. As Skiba sings on the new record, "God
bless catastrophe…"
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