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INTERVIEWS AND ARTICLES: "ALBUM REVIEW:
SLANT MAGAZINE" Ah, side projects: a rock star's oasis of songwriting freedom. Or,
as Box Car Racer drummer Travis Barker explained to Rolling Stone, "I
don't want to be in a side project to be popular. I just want to play
music and have fun, so it probably won't be the most radio-friendly
or commercial-friendly music." Excusing the disenchanting implication
that creating radio-friendly/commercially-viable music isn't fun, Barker's
comments are indicative of the advantages the "side project"
offers. Liberated of many expectations (hit singles, massive record
sales), musicians can now make music that doesn't follow sad formulas
for success (you know, verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus-chorus),
or at least that's the hope. Box Car Racer, one such side-spawn of pop-punk
formula junkies Blink-182, is the brainchild of Barker and guitarist/vocalist
Tom DeLonge. Box Car Racer isn't nearly as experimental as its supposed
influences (Fugazi and the Refused), but it's a much-needed departure
from the banality of Blink-182. Lyrically, DeLonge continues writing about his favorite subjects (relationships
and young people), but he offers an uncharacteristic knowingness to
the songs. He minces no words on "The End With You" ("There
are no useful drugs to escape from feeling numb") and then offers
up a witty metaphor on "Watch The World" ("I saw this
man dispose of hunger and soap operas, too/I saw a field that grew perfection
fall of things you do"). The only "joke song" on the
record is "My First Punk Song," which may very well be the
first song DeLonge or Barker ever wrote. With intentionally poor sound
quality and absurd lyrics ("I got brownies from your mother/They
gave me syphilis/I got no dick"), the track is a caricature of
Blink tracks like "Happy Holidays, You Bastard," a possible
indication that DeLonge is growing up. Indeed, his words don't exactly
challenge the mind, but he's offering more of himself than before, perhaps
seeking an audience larger than Blink's preteen fanbase. CREDITS: AARON SCOTT // SLANTMAGAZINE.COM |