Love Everybody

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (82 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 38:16

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AFter the Break Up

Dipsy

Smaller after the break up, and reuniting they still have not lost that fun edge. Download it and have some joy in your life.

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A band grows up -- maybe not for the better

WhoNeedsaNickname

The first 2 albums were just thrashy goof-arounds. This one tries to be a little more like a regular album, with mixed results. "Love Everybody," "Munky River," and "Shreds of Boa" are all blasts of classic PUSA. "Some Postman" is a notch more subdued than average, but it works and makes a nice sort-of love song (what's with the yelp of "1993!" in the bridge, though?) The rest of it, though, feels tired and uninspired -- "Clean Machine" and "Zero Friction" are overproduced and feel like the spirit was sucked out of them. "Vestina" just goes nowhere, and "5,500 miles," at 4:00 (close to double the running time of some PUSA songs) feels even longer than it is. As a huge PUSA fan, I still think it's ok to just pick and choose tunes off this one, rather than grabbing the whole thing.

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Totally awesome

Warbadger

Can I even say how awesome the Presidents are? Seriously. I fucking love them to goddamn death. I liked previous albums more, but this one is still great. If you have ever enjoyed their stuff then give this entire album a preview.

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They Say All Media Guide

Is Lump fast asleep, or rocking out with the band? The year: 1995. Mauled by the grunge animal, the nation embraces a different sound from Seattle — a new leadership — one with eight steel strings to its name and a clutch of songs about kitties, peaches, and lingering last in line for brains. The Presidents of the United States of America hit Mach 2 with their wry punkish platform, and rode it all the way to platinum before quietly disappearing. While the band’s sound had fit perfectly into the screwy ’90s, it was a novelty memory by the 21st century. Which is too bad, because 2000′s under-the-radar LP Freaked Out and Small was pretty damn good, and 2004′s Love Everybody is even better. A little older and rocking the family life, two-string “basitarist” Chris Ballew, guitarist Dave Dederer, and drummer Jason Finn have focused the beam of their wit laser on their tightest melodies yet. The sound’s as stripped down as it ever was — dry punk-derived chording with peppy basslines and consistently propulsive drumming. But the new songs’ chorus harmonies are more consistently inviting, and the occasional keyboard flourish keeps things interesting. The Presidents have also settled into a sort of sardonic humanism. They still write songs about animal eyes in the gooey darkness (“Munky River”). But “Zero Friction” considers a drum machine as a metaphor for the meaning of life, and “Poke and Destroy” celebrates little boys’ universal need to break stuff. “You gotta love everybody,” the opening title track directs, “and make ‘em feel good about themselves.” “Some Postman” is the perfect Presidents song, with its simply effective mix of acoustic and electric guitars and that energetic chorus. But it’s also a love song, its quirkiness fueled into clever lyrics about a long-distance relationship. Other Love Everybody highlights include the ruckus-raising “Clean Machine” (dig that fuzzy tone), the almost Spoon-sounding “Vestina,” and “Shreds of Boa,” which harks back to their 1995 style, but is just a stronger song all around. Love Everybody is an enjoyable and welcome return for the Presidents of the United States. As it turns out, the peaches are even sweeter on the other side. – Johnny Loftus

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