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Die! Die! Die!

Die! Die! Die!

(S.A.F.; US: 23 Oct 2006; UK: Available as import; Australia release date: 22 Jan 2007)

The predictable, SXSW-fueled enthusiasm for this band’ll probably write itself: expect “fierce”, “brutal”, “blasting”. Lucky we’ve got such short memories, because the groundswell didn’t really shift in the band’s favour following their appearance at the festival last year. But no matter—we can afford patience for a debut that promises, well, fiercely brutal blasts of guitar noise. The band’s self-titled, Steve Albini-produced effort—due conveniently post-SXSW, on April 3—is, indeed, big on the pummel factor. At least it’s authentic. And brief—at 22 minutes, Die! Die! Die! is more an EP than a full-length (but how much of this noise can one take at a time?). At their best, as on “Year Nine, Yeah!”, the group is all reckless punk-rock spasm, tightly coiled and ready to spring from the speakers. “Franz (17 Die! Die! Die! Fans Can’t Be Wrong)” is another example: building off a simple riff, the song’s carried by Andrew Wilson’s shredding vocals (like a much rawer Jack White) and this endearing desperation. That desperation’s the strongest, most coherent emotion on Die! Die! Die!, and though listening to the group may be an almost painful experience, that’s really the point. But the group really needs to expand their songwriting scope if they’re going to produce a work that’s hefty but nuanced enough to garner greater attention. Attitude may carry Die! Die! Die!, but we’ll expect more from a 40-minute sophomore.

Rating:

Dan Raper has been writing about music for PopMatters since 2005. Prior to that he did the same thing for his college newspaper and for his school newspaper before that. Of course he also writes fiction, though his only published work is entitled "Gamma-secretase exists on the plasma membrane as an intact complex that accepts substrates and effects intramembrane cleavage". He is currently studying medicine at the University of Sydney, Australia.


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13 Feb 2008
Taking the raw blueprints of their self-titled debut, Die! Die! Die! fuse this punk spirit with matured songwriting on its follow-up.
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