I've been a fan of this band since their major label debut in 2000. I put it on sale in our prime listening station, and when that didn't produce results, played it daily in-store for everyone to hear. I couldn't get anyone to believe that Blue October would eventually become a successful domestic band. Six years later, "Hate Me" resonated with the masses, making Blue October a platinum seller in North America. Naturally, the followup album charted higher, leading to bigger tours and venues. And now "Any Man..." is a Top 10 record, and it is well deserved.
I've truly appreciated the growth and development of this band over the decade, and I'm so happy that others get it besides me. Yeah, so it took most of you longer, but that's OK, you're on the proverbial bandwagon now. Better strap in for the ride though, because I'm thinking frontman Justin Furstenfeld's head may explode any day now.
Blue October hasn't ever been a pop band with lalala/sing-along songs, but there were hooks, albeit with some sharp barbs for lyrics. I mean, really, "Hate Me?" I know you sang along and many of you related, but it was the final song from '09's "Approaching Normal" that went WAAAYYY beyond "normal." As "The End" concluded, I had to pick my chin off the floor and apply a band-aid to stop the bleeding. Then I immediately played it again in order to make sure I heard what I thought I heard. Go ahead and find it on your Internet cloud of choice if you haven't experienced it and come on back after your through....
That has to be one of the most vivid, violent songs I've ever heard, but it was only one song. "Any Man..." is a complete album of piss and vinegar, one of the angriest records imaginable, and it could possibly appeal to Any Man In America.
Subject: Divorce. Guys always seem to get the shaft and have to suck it up and crawl away. Not Furstenfeld. He has a forum to vent his frustrations, and whew, I wouldn't want to be his ex. I'm going to link one of the tracks here that displays the lyrics, but this is one of the mild ones with some true, heartfelt emotion. You'll see it's not a simple song. I found one reviewer who said he didn't hear any hooks anymore. That's probably from some young journalist wannabe who played the record once so he could hit his deadline. As I've said, the hooks are there but with unconventional messages. And they come in a wide range of musical jackets. Along with the rock there's some angry boy white rap, a track that could feature Phil Collins vocalizing, and another that's a dead ringer for a Rob Thomas/Matchbox 20 tune. Here is an acoustic version of "The Chills" as an example of how diversified they can be. The studio version of this is an arena-filling, power rocker...
This is not a kid-friendly record as it's loaded with a minefield of four-letter words. Hey, the guy is pissed off! But I'd be willing to bet that any of you male readers of this post who've been through a messy break-up of any kind will connect to part, if not all, of "Any Man In America"
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