For Your Own Special Sweetheart

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ALBUM INFORMATION
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Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 41:42

eMusic Review

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Jon Wiederhorn

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A masterful blend of tense guitars, crashing rhythms, tumbling beats and sing-along hooks.
2006 | Label: DeSoto Records / IODA

It's easy to see how post-punk luminaries Jawbox became a major influence on today's emo sound. The band's third album, 1994's For Your Own Special Sweetheart is a masterful blend of tense guitars, crashing rhythms, tumbling beats and sing-along hooks that both clashed with the instrumentation and made the songs more accessible. "Savory," for example, features tinny, ringing guitars and a brash counter-riff that rubs against the melodic vocals like coarse sandpaper.

Frontman J. Robbins was once a member of Dischord's progressive hardcore band Government Issue, and while GI wasn't an emo band, they were surrounded by first-wave Dischord emocore bands like Rites of Spring, the Faith, and Embrace. Being in that circle no doubt rubbed off on Robbins; Jawbox incorporates that style of heart-on-sleeve emotion with shards of dissonant post-punk.

Clearly, outfits like Fugazi, Big Black and Gang of Four also influenced Jawbox, but the DC quartet were able to weave those inspirations into a tuneful tapestry that never lacked urgency or intensity. And while songs like "Cooling Card" and "Jackpot Plus!" tapped into the alternative radio crowd, "Cruel Swing," a dissonant avant-jazz/blues romp and "Whitney Walks," a spectral rumination slashed by shards of volume,… read more »

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heh heh heh...doll nipple!

frogkopf

Plastic sex ROCKX!!!!!!!!

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cosmo

krapvag

you are spot on! I love hearing an awesome album for the first time, especially when you have no idea what it sounds like This is definitely one of those albums

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Nice

cosmo

The first time one is turned on to an exceptionally good album is one of the best feelings in life. The reviews are right on this time.

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Help Cal

cleanfront

Bump for Reliquary's review. Here's the link... For DeSoto Records and Callum Robbins. http://www.desotorecords.com/cal/index.shtml

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a masterpiece

raindogs

J. Robbins has made a lot of great music over the years, but this is really the album where it all came together. Brilliant from start to finish. Do you like loud guitars? Dense, fascinating lyrics? Powerful, driving songs that still have plenty of hooks to keep you singing along. Of course you do. So get this immediately and then go check out J. Robbin's new band, The Channels.

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very good

J'Adorno

this was recorded after they toured with Helmet and picked up some of their stop-start dynamics. I would recommend starting with either novelty or grippe, though, as both have aged better.

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Classic

Reliquary

This has to be a part of the post-punk, post-hardcore, whatever lexicon. This is a band and an album that have influenced so many bands making music today. A fantastic record and a true turning point for the band. If you're a fan and you appreciate what these people have done for us, please check out the DeSoto Records website to find out what J. Robbins is currently going through. A man who's given so much to music fans certainly deserves our help.

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get it!

styrofoam

i've been waiting for this to become available again for such a long time... total classic album and my favourite jawbox release!

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It rocks yo

Reekee10

This band was by far one of the best bands I've seen live. This album was a staple of my 20's and opened up my musical tastes to a much more cerebal type of rock music.

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BUY ASAP!!!

GAMRA

Although the entire Jawbox catalog is a must own, begin with this album. The major label on the packaging did nothing to dull the intense sound of the band and the songwriting is in peak form. The entire album is strong so don't skip a track.

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They Say All Media Guide

Indie purists reflexively moaned — and, in one documented case, hoped for the band’s vehicular death — once word spread of Jawbox’s Atlantic deal. No band had left the sacred Dischord label for a major prior to Jawbox, so it was seen by some as an unforgivable crime against D.I.Y. The move, inconsequential from a creative standpoint, was the betrayed’s loss. The band’s first album for the bad guys represents their peak, a thrilling collision of vibrant guitar-generated noise and off-center melodic hooks over a rhythm section that swings as easily as it pummels. Not transitional merely in the label-of-release sense, For Your Own Special Sweetheart introduced new drummer Zach Barocas, whose intricate style is as punishing as necessary for any post-hardcore band while more inspired by jazz heavyweights Tony Williams and Jack DeJohnette than any punk. Kim Coletta’s bass, present enough in the mix to be compared to a variety of power tools, rumbles with a richness and dexterity that was only hinted at on the band’s prior releases, while the guitar interplay between Bill Barbot and J. Robbins, colorful and dynamic, alternates between ringing/tingling and needling/careening. This all produces an album that is heavy on songs that gracefully batter and flit unpredictably between mid-tempo and charging speeds. Whether pushed along by the addition of Barocas or the band’s general development, FYOSS also contains a pair of slower, subtle songs that are just as compelling as the aggressive material. Robbins’ lyrics, as cerebral and inscrutable as ever, and more about sound than meaning, are at least decipherable throughout the muscular, corrosive jangle-pop of “Savory” (about the objectification of women), the appropriately rush-inducing “Jackpot Plus!” (the futility of gambling), and “Motorist” (disorientation after a car crash, inspired by J.G. Ballard’s Concrete Island). Otherwise, a Jawbox decoder ring is necessary. (For example, a Jawbox-to-punk translation of “Technicolored static sender/Second guess my love for danger” could be “I’m a couch potato/Couch potato, ungh!”) More importantly, don’t forget to wear a neck brace. Inside or outside its D.C. epicenter, this is one of post-hardcore’s most exceptional releases, second to whatever Fugazi album gives you the biggest charge. – Andy Kellman

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