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The Monitor

Titus Andronicus

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Album Review

Named for one of the U.S. Navy’s legendary, ironclad battleships, and with a loose civil war concept in tow, Titus Andronicus shows signs of maturity on The Monitor, not just in their weighty theme and the abundance of historical references, but also musically. Coming off their lo-fi, garage-punk debut, the four-piece aimed high for their second album, and incorporated a surplus of instrumentation (bagpipes, fiddle, trombone, and cello, among other things) that was performed by a who’s-who in the underground indie rock circuit. Guest musicians from the Hold Steady, Double Dagger, Vivian Girls, Ponytail, Spider Bags, Hallelujah the Hills, Wye Oak, the Felice Brothers, Deer Tick, and Dinowalrus all lend a hand in beefing up the production value, taking TA’s sound from that of a blue-collar bar band to a chugging Celtic punk arena powerhouse. There are striking similarities to the Pogues’ drunken caterwauling and the Replacements’ straining voracity, as well as Bright Eyes’ affinity for literary drama, and while it’s impressive that the band fills such big shoes, the biggest achievement of The Monitor is that it feels so significant in its own right. It’s the sound of a band dipping into classic sounds, and spreading them out to make their own classic. Singer Patrick Stickles is completely booze-drenched and riled as he rifles through journal entries about alcoholism and loserdom in down-and-out pub-shoutalongs. He howls with sincerity “there is nothing about myself I respect, still haven’t done anything I did not later regret,“ and weaves self-depreciation into sadly funny quips, “Talk about our grandkids as we stroke our grey beards, funny that we’re doing car bombs after all of these years.” Blowing past the hour mark with muscular, multi-segmented songs that branch off into sax solos, honky tonk piano parts, and faux civil war snippets, the record is ambitious, to say the least (think, a modern-day Bat Out of Hell), but it never feels too heavy-handed. Fourteen-minute closer “The Battle of Hampton Roads” is as riveting as it is ambitious, and that's saying something.

Customer Reviews

Not good... at all.

Now I understand that some people out there love these guys. In fact it is the several favorable reviews that convinced me to purchase this album. This album is very hard to listen all the way through. I seriously gave this album a chance and tried listening to it on multiple occassions because quite frankly flushing $10 down the drain is not something I'm excited about.

For me it is not hard to really judge music. It has to make me feel something. This album only makes me feel like I have been ripped off. It has absolutely no emotional attachment at all.

The singer has a very bad voice. It's a though he is intoxicated and not in a good way like Neil Young's Tonight Tonight album.

The reason I have given it two stars instead of one is because there are some slight moments when I thought "Ok this sounds cool" but then it reverts to making me want to puke...all over that $10 I placed in the toilet.

I usually never write a negative review if I really don't like an album because it really is in the "eye of the beholder" however due to the reviews worshiping this album out there (check out the Consequence of Sound review) I really felt like I had to warn people who are on the fence about this album.

I'm sorry to those who think this album is good however I stand by my subject line.

Best album of 2010

If you really listen to this album, you will appreciate the intelligence and just amazingness behind it. Its so far the best album I heard of 2010. These guys take Bruce Springsteen and Refused and make it their own. Their are moments that rock hard and moments that are just beautiful. Each song deserves a listen because this is just a solid album.

I'm glad they left New Jersey!

POWER! From cover to cover, it seems impossible for this band to disappoint... With a cameo by Craig Finn (Hold Steady) this album couldn't be any better! Buy it NOW!

Biography

Formed: 2005 in Glen Rock, NJ

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

A punk-inflected indie rock group whose bawling, thrashing sound reflected a wide range of influences ranging from the Pixies to Bright Eyes to Bruce Springsteen, Glen Rock, NJ's Titus Andronicus formed in 2005 with Liam Betson, Ian Graetzer, Eric Harm, Patrick Stickles, and Dan Tews. The band's debut full-length, The Airing of Grievances (which makes reference to a Seinfeld episode), was first released by Troubleman Unlimited in 2008, then picked up for wider distribution by XL Recordings in January...
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The Monitor, Titus Andronicus
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