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Invented (Deluxe Version)

Jimmy Eat World

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Album Review

The massive success of Jimmy Eat World's 2001 Bleed American propelled the band into the mass-culture spotlight, with the hit single "The Middle" seemingly popping up in every third movie released and the group turning in an energized performance on Saturday Night Live. Many, many groups followed in their wake, crafting a similar blend of melodic, anguished punk-pop and leaving Jimmy Eat World in the position of crafting a follow-up that set them apart from their acolytes. Futures gets around this dilemma in two ways. First, with the help of producer Gil Norton, the band polishes its sound until it shines like a slick '70s arena rock record. The guitars are stacked like thick diamonds, the vocals are way out front and buttressed by sweet harmonies in the choruses, the drums sound large, and the mix is loaded with sweetening from acoustic guitars, keyboards, and female vocals. In the process, they sacrificed the immediacy of the previous record, but they gained an epic and weighty feel. Secondly, the lyrics are much darker and more mature, including themes that revolve around politics, drugs, and despair. The piano-and-feedback ballad "Drugs or Me" and the bittersweet love song "Night Drive" are the products of age and experience the band lacked until now. The best song on the record, the very Disintegration-era Cure-sounding "23," sounds like it was recorded by a different group entirely. Some things have remained the same, however. Jim Adkins' vocals are as intense and heart-tugging as ever, and the band still writes hooks that will have you singing along before the song is half over. "Just Tonight," "Futures," and the AC/DC-sampling "Pain" are all trademark Jimmy Eat World punky pop/rockers with anthemic choruses, while "The World You Love" and "Work" display the sweetly melodic side of the band. There are a couple of stumbles (the decision to replace Petra Haden's charming vocals with Liz Phair's, the generic "Nothingwrong"), but they don't detract from the overall power of the record. Futures will most likely not be the sensation that Bleed American was — it is too dark and inwardly focused for that — but it shows a progression of sound and emotion that fans of the band should embrace. [Limited quantities of the record came with a second disc made up of demos of all the songs on the album. Less polished and more immediate, the disc makes an interesting companion to the official release and is well worth seeking out.]

Customer Reviews

Unfortunately - Disappointing

Now this review is coming from a very big Jimmy Eat World (JEW) fan, I have seen them in concert multiple times and have all their albums and I was looking forward to this new album.

The album starts off with a lot of promise, the first two songs on the album are probably the best with My Best Theory being the best song. What's disappointing with this album is that there is nothing unique about it. JEW have always had an original sound since Bleed America and carried it through until the last album where they started experimenting a little too much. On the last album Chase This Light they moved to close to the POP genre and on Invented they are trying to find their way back but what they found was a boring void and most likely a need to release new material to stay relevant.

The best music they ever created was on Bleed America and Futures which were pretty much flawless albums. But on Invented Jim Adkins has lost his passion and you can hear his own disappointment with this album on almost every song where he sounds mostly monotone.

Overall not really worth buying, but I wish it was.

Different... but good!

I will admit that they sound very different then they did in say, Futures, but, that was 6 years ago! There aloud to change their sound alittle. They do have more of a pop-y sound but, it's not like sugar pop music! THey're slight change in sound payed off REALLY well. It is definetly worth buying. You will NOT be sorry to buy.

Another Great Album by Jimmy Eat World!!

They tried something new....and it totally paid off!
Every song is so catchy and makes you want to listen to it over and over
Its kind of a different sound then what Jimmy Eat World usually are, but it makes it so much better!
Give it a shot...listen to the whole album, and you'll be happy you bought it! I know I am!

Biography

Formed: 1994 in Mesa, AZ

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Once a trailblazing name in the mid-'90s emocore scene, Jimmy Eat World eventually found a larger audience by embracing a blend of alternative rock and power pop that targeted the heart as well as the head. The band's influence widened considerably with 1999's Clarity — an album that has since emerged as a landmark of the emo genre — it was the band's follow-up (specifically the infectious single "The Middle") that crowned them as major figures in commercial rock. The emo label proved...
Full bio

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