It does annoy me that a lot of the people enjoying this are acting like they 'get' or understand something that everyone else doesn't. There's an odd sense of superiority there. It's clearly a divisive track, I'm sure FOB knows it and you know it too, so it should be easy to comprehend the distaste.
Fair point but I can't recall a band that has changed their style this drastically. It's impossible to detach myself from the fact that I once loved this band.
That was a joke right?...Instead of all the computerized crap, they should have just put a huge chorus instead and it would have been good to go
Jason Tate=different,site same-old "I know everything better than everyone else mentality, and if someone has different opinion than me that someone is stupid". I thought I'll come back to commenting, but no thank you I dont need something that was pretty pathetic 15 years ago
I think we can agree that rock music has certain inherent qualities (just like any genre of music). Qualities shared by contemporary rock bands as well as Elvis and Queen. I'd find it much more difficult to say this track has anything resembling those qualities though. It's not a knock to the band, there's a lot of pop music I like. Just not this particular pop song.
I also have absolutely no idea what I just listened to, but to be fair, I hated "American Beauty / American Psycho" the first time I heard it and it ended up being one of my favorite tracks on that album, so this will likely grow on me
I disagree completely that those qualities are not present here. Shifted, utilized differently, and more modern ... sure. But at one point what Queen was doing was "new" for what anyone considered rock as well.
Your two posts were stupid. Not my fault you made a really dumb post and followed it up with a bunch of typos.
I thought a lot of AB/AP had a punk aesthetic and approach to the music, and this song is definitely the darkest and "heaviest" thing they've done since IOH.
Just feels too easy to say that any rock band transitioning to a more pop sound is still playing rock music just in a more "modern" fashion. At some point those lines blur and a band can just simply be playing a different genre of music. Also, rock music can progress in a million different ways that don't involve just becoming poppier.
It's easy to say because it's been historically correct, bands that were considered "hard rock" 40 years ago sound like bubblegum pop comparatively today. Rock music can progress in a million different ways, my argument is that this way is one of them.
Okay I've been listening to it on repeat for like 20 minutes and I've gotta say, it's like the weirdest thing since follie and I couldn't be happier about that. Weird and crazy fall out boy is the BEST fall out boy. I also love how the track is so poppy but feels oddly and awesomely heavy. Sweet drums too.
Having listened to this a few more times now I will concede there's more live drums (and interesting ones too!) on this than I initially thought, they just sound more like samples. But what do I know, I'm just a nerd.
It seems like we're not going to agree on this one, which is fine. I'm just curious what, in your opinion a band has to sound like before they're considered a pop band? Like obviously they are two separate genres separated by a number of traits. What would you consider to be an example of a rock band that fully embraced a pop sound if not Fall Out Boy?
As someone who isn't a fan of the band at all, definitely sounds better than the last album to me. But my god some of those lyrics are clangers. Fun, big chorus.
Not that FOB is anywhere near NIN but that poppy yet odd and heavy feel make for some really good NIN songs.