Living With The Living

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Living With The Living album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 61:01

eMusic Review 0

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Ira Robbins

eMusic Contributor

Ira Robbins co-founded Trouser Press magazine in 1974. (Think of it as a pre-Internet music blog). He was later pop music editor at Newsday and has written for ...more »

04.22.11
New Jersey indie icon's fifth album of tuneful, energetic punk-pop.
Label: Touch And Go

If the worst that can be said of nostalgic music is that it makes you miss the original — and the best that it's merely an improvement — Ted Leo is still in a class by himself when it comes to relocating and reinvigorating the fiery spirit that produced the great sounds of the '70s and early '80s. Too tuneful and structured for punk but too brashly energetic (not to mention politically charged) for pop, Leo taps back into the innocent spirit that once drove bands, both great and small, into an amorphous and stylistically diverse movement, bound together by the common belief that they should play their hearts out, regardless of possible personal benefit. The same conviction, that putting everything on the line for the abandon and joy of electric music-making is a worthwhile goal in and of itself, was just as valid to the hardcore pioneers as it was to London new wavers, Midwest post-punks, primal garage rockers and unbridled power-poppers. None of it was about taming the id or turning down the amps to become more chart-friendly or contemporary, they were simply doing what felt right, as hard and fast as they could. It yielded some really… read more »

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The Man

Biteme52

Ted Leo is one of the most intellegent punk/folk singer/songwriters to have hit the ears since forever. Every album is different, never losing it's mind in the process and The Pharmasists are the perfect band to back this man up. Always awesome...always in your face and in your heart.

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Oron

ogga

Just saw their live show (in 9:30 club in DC)! Was one of the best shows I've been in for long time-I have great time although I even didn't know most of the songs. I feel little stupid I didn't know about Ted Leo's music till this past weekend...

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Manic Streaks

Frigus

These chaps strike a similar chord to that of the Manic Street Preachers, lacking the Manic’s mania though. Ted certainly has more than one musical bone in him, but I find his influences rather transparent and the melodies somewhat sterile.

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Ted + Brendan = get the F up

J-Lo

It's interesting that many of Ted's eMusic fans were disappointed by this record. I'm lukewarm on his others, and I think this is easily his best. To me it seems like everything Brendan Canty touches turns to gold.

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it's a protest album

funkywave

yes, it's a protest album. of course, they've gotten political on their other stuff too. overall it's very good, doesn't measure up to "shake the sheets" but still excellent.

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chronique de bokson.net

bokson

Ted Leo, bien qu'avec un répertoire somme toute classique et très accessible, est une exception du rock contemporain. Notamment parce qu'il ne cesse de répéter cette même recette au fur et à mesure que ses albums sortent. Mais quand on se plonge dans les véritables tubes rappelant tour à tour Costello, Weezer, Fugazi que sont ici "Colleen", "La Costa Brava", et le très politisé "Bomb.Repeat.Bomb", impossible d'empoigner le bâton pour lui infliger une bonne leçon. Il ne nous reste plus qu'à attendre, bouche cousue, que ce grand bonhomme au talent incommensurable daigne prendre un peu plus de risque. Mais si tel n'est pas le cas, on se contentera encore largement d'un sixième album dans la même veine... www.bokson.net

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Weird Al?

bagaag

The singer in this band sounds like a cross between Weird Al and Joe Jackson. Odd.

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A fair review...

cbamity

Ok, I see a bunch of 1 and 2 star reviews. Come On. You obviously havent really listened to the album. This is not my favorite of his, but it is still very good. Certainly a bit worse than the last two albums. The main flaw with this album is that the catchiest songs (e.g. Coleen, Bottle of Buckie) are a bit bland/unoriginal. Plus its a bit bloated: he could have shortened a few songs, and/or left some tracks off. This album does have several great tracks however: Who Do You Love, La Costa Brava, Bomb repeat, Lost Brigade, and Some beginner's Mind.

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Why all the bashing?

Jaquee

This album isn't that bad...I'll admit, when I first listened to it I wasn't as immediately hooked as was the case with past Ted Leo albums, but this one actually is quite good. If you listen to it a few times and still don't like it, then write your negative review...but this actually is quite an enjoyable album.

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Honestly. Not expected.

matt.minuti

I love ted leo. I had downloaded a bit of his stuff on the typical piracy channels, and when i noticed he's on emusic, i took the opportunity to actually buy it all. Plus his stuff from chisel. Great stuff. Then I see this came out, i buy it immediately without thinking, and about an hour later, after listening, i regret wasting my downloads on it. It's not the sort of music i can put on in the background while i do the dishes anymore. It almost takes work to listen to.

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They Say All Music Guide

When it comes to consistency, Ted Leo is the man. When it comes to writing songs bristling with nervy energy and sincere conviction that inspire, question, and reflect, there are only a few of his peers that can really measure up. Living with the Living marks full-length number five for Leo and his crew of Pharmacists, and it’s another literate and stirring collection of songs built around his sweetly elastic voice and tightly wound guitars. On personal and human levels, he hits it all — anger, happiness, frustration, love, uncertainty, hope, sadness, rebellion — in songs that burst with passion and a true zest for being alive; cuts like the bright immediacy of “The Sons of Cain” and the tender Irish-flavored frolic of “A Bottle of Buckie” find Leo in top form and easily put a smile on one’s face. Bitter political assertions surface like usual, yet nothing in Leo’s career thus far hits quite as hard as the acerbically blunt rant of “Bomb.Repeat.Bomb.” Brazen, in-your-face and stretched to the seams with seething defiance, Leo basically barks a giant fuck you to the government. It’s all upfront danger and burning emotion when he spits, “Oh sure, you could mobilize a million troops…but then people start to ask questions/So when you drop in out of the white clouds in a blue sky/Don’t worry about them having to see the whites of your blue eyes.” The anxious pace and shout-singing make the song a definite standout, and though there are other tracks present to further vary things a bit — the dub-inflected “The Unwanted Things,” the slow-paced poignancy of “The Toro and the Toreador” — the one fault (if you can find one at all with him) is that Leo has basically been writing the same album for the last few years. All excellent albums with stellar songs, but really, there’s not much sonically to separate his records (or his pretty straightforward, by-now almost formulaic songs) out from one another. Plenty of Living with the Living measures up with his best, so it’s really hard to knock such a likable guy who obviously knows his strengths and can consistently execute great songs — sentimental and motivating, socially conscious and challenging, Leo hardly falters. Yet although his mixture of politics, heart and intelligence with taut guitars and a sweet falsetto will presumably be engaging forever (and Leo hits much more than he ever misses), it’s getting hard to ignore that little voice inside that wants something more from him. Something a bit different that stretches his songwriting further and shows that he’s really trying to push himself. There’s no denying his talent, and five winning albums is still a hell of a streak. But Ted, we know you’ve got more in you. – Corey Apar

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