Get Evens

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (170 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 40:50

eMusic Review

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Lindsey Thomas

eMusic Contributor

Lindsey Thomas began writing about music as a snarky columnist for her high school newspaper. She has since become slightly less snarky, and has worked as an ed...more »

04.22.11
Protest music, minus the smugness
Label: Dischord Records

Despite its title, Get Evens isn't about seeking revenge or even rousing Dischord's usual troops. Betting on the idea that well-phrased dissatisfaction reaches greater numbers outside of high school than screaming outrage, Fugazi's Ian MacKaye and the Warmers 'Amy Farina write protest songs that aren't flecked with spittle or redolent of the smug whiff of someone who has all the answers. But while their hardcore-sired folk is levelheaded, the political message isn't always fresh: "Everybody knows you are a liar" goes one of the easier diatribes over the anxious rumble of MacKaye's baritone guitar and Farina's relentless drums. But more often, the Evens 'songs are smart and not entirely predictable. Rather than lay out the conversation which might ensue over "Dinner with the President," the duo wonder at the fact that they have yet to receive an invitation. "Maybe power lies in accessibility," MacKaye sings. "Maybe power lies."

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Love It

MonsterDad

Push all the political protest aside and listen. A great, spare, effort, with tons of energy and rage just barely hidden under the surface.

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under the radar

getspaidtodropshit

This may not be as good as the first album, but I still love it. So simple and so effective. Male voice, female voice, guitar and drums that understand what it is about music that connects to emotions with no wasted element. It is political in a really organic way, not forced at all as other reviewers have suggested. "Get Even" is fantastic. there is a learning curve here for the rest of the songs, but it is worth it.

user avatar

A real downer.

comma8

A political protest record from a second rate lyricist putting together contrived "political" story songs. Ian MacKaye's always been firmly on the dour side, but this is really forced. Just like a friend who complains about politics all day long, the act gets old here as well. Really a shame that the main takeaway from this is that MacKaye doesn't like the President. The music even takes a hit as it's all dirge with no bombast - and even Amy Farina doesn't save it.

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Speak up!!

EddieB

The best Bush policy protest album since American Idiot. Love this band.

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excellent again.

tania

i love it. what a sound they've made together! This is hardcore protest folk for the present.

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Outstanding.

epoch

Every bit as good as their debut release, if not better. Simple lyrics with complex rhythms make for some wonderful music. I'm convinced: Ian can do no wrong. And Amy is possibly the best drummer I've heard.

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Amazing!

ColtraneWasGod

I'd never heard of the Evens, but the freebie "No Money" got me hooked. What twists and turns, what a segue into a cannibal beat midway through the song. This is spare stuff, with gorgeous, loping bass lines, a languid feel, and cutting lyrics. Everything here sounds like restrained anger, but I don't say that as though it is a bad thing. The chorus of "You must be insane..." in "All You Find You Keep" is something you will NOT get out of your head ever again, I promise.

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so far so good

ejwernet

and I bought this one at the local digs. more later when I finish the first listen. So far, it feels like a great follow up to the first Evens release.

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They Say All Media Guide

Normally, when a band decides to scale back production and embellishment on a record, it’s really no big deal. Many bands decide to drop the overdubs, or reduce the keyboards, or only work with a live horn section, for example. But when your band consists of two people, one playing baritone guitar and singing while the other drums and sings, “scaling back” seems like an impossibility. On the first Evens release, Ian MacKaye and Amy Farina had scaled back the angularity and electric dominance of their prior bands (Fugazi and Warmers, respectively) and chose to keep the music subtle, rooted in atmospherics. Adding to the stripped down lineup, Farina and MacKaye added piano and mood through post-production to give the album a rather warm, close feel. Although at times some of the tones could be jarring or the rhythms jagged, moods and atmosphere would swirl in and out, giving a slightly less than organic feel, leaving the listener safe in the opinion that a lot of the record could not be re-created on-stage in such detail. For Get Evens, their second full-length, the Evens must have agreed, and embarked on a recording process that was much more immediate, eschewing piano and overdubs, recording the songs with a more “live” sound, culminating in a record that is rough, angular, and wholly organic. But that is only half the picture. Both Farina and MacKaye spent a great deal of time in their previous bands dealing in what can only be called more abstract lyrical ideas. Sure, there is no mistaking the meanings behind Fugazi’s “Great Cop,” or “Give Me the Cure,” but much of that band’s conceptual fare was left up the ear and mind of the listener. With the Evens, MacKaye and Farina have obviously decided to leave that mindset behind, making pointed protest and criticism without flinching. “Everybody Knows,” with its scathing indictment of the real purpose of politicians and George W. Bush, pulls no punches. There’s no doubt as to what “you fabricated your way in here and everybody knows…you are a liar” means, or whom it’s meant for. Being from D.C., and living in these times, it’s no great surprise that the targets of MacKaye and Farina are the elected officials currently residing on Pennsylvania Ave. and others inhabiting federal offices. One only needs to take one listen to “Dinner with the President” to get the idea. But the easy political targets aren’t the only ones examined on this disc. The overreaching of government resultant from cashing in on fear and paranoia in the years since 9/11 get a fantastic (and arguably best so far in terms of songs on the matter) reading on “All You Find You Keep.” The emptiness of plastic culture (“Cache Is Empty”), consumerism (“Eventually”) and — most important to the overall theme of the record — freedom (“Get Even”) are examinations that gain so much from the decision to keep things as raw and real as possible. The Evens’ first disc was pointed and protesting, to be sure, but here, on Get Evens, the raw feeling of the record makes the message here more pointed, more specific, and more meaningful. Protest has always worked best when it is free of embellishment that may diffuse the message. By keeping the proceedings more proletarian, like their shows, the Evens have created a record that blossoms because — as they themselves put it — “there’s nothing in the way.” – Chris True

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