The '59 Sound

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The '59 Sound album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 41:32

eMusic Review 0

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Matthew Fritch

eMusic Contributor

08.18.08
Soaring anthems about working-class heroes and hard-luck teenagers.
2008 | Label: Side One Dummy

With all due respect to Springsteen-loving outfits such as the Hold Steady and Arcade Fire, the Boss already has some local boys who seem to have the apprenticeship locked down tight. The members of New Brunswick, N.J.'s the Gaslight Anthem are young and hungry, earnest to a fault and apparently very eager to impress upon us their warped-cassette copies of Born In The USA: “No surrender, my Bobby Jean,” sings frontman Brian Fallon on the band's second full-length, economically fitting together his Springsteen references like Tetris blocks. So it's no surprise that The '59 Sound is filled with songs about working-class heroes and hard-luck teenagers cruising around in the backseats of cars and washing away sin with cheap whiskey and beer. The shocker is that the Gaslight Anthem has taken these well-worn Jersey-rebel themes and revived them through the sheer power of youth.

Opening with the crackling speaker noise of a needle hitting vinyl, The '59 Sound echoes all around the ragged-rock corners of a record collection. It particularly tends to linger in mid-period Replacements (circa Tim and Pleased To Meet Me) on “Casanova, Baby!” and the title track, with Fallon nailing the raspy anxiety of Paul… read more »

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user avatar

love these guys!!!!!

emmyisyummy

when i first listened to the gaslight anthem i heard a springsteen knockoff and i really don't like springsteen. for me, i like springsteen in small doses. i might listen to dancing in the dark once in a playlist and have my springsteen fix for months. but gaslight anthem kept growing and growing and growing on me! and before i knew it i had listened to some of these songs over 100 times (no joke, i just checked my play counts on itunes!) i love this band. so what if they sound springsteen-y, and so what if their songs contain millions of references to other songs? this music is CATCHY and super fun to listen to. there isn't one song that i skip on this entire album. as a side note, i saw these guys live a few months ago and they rocked it!!!

user avatar

Gets better with age

Gorrck

Just an amazing album that keeps getting better with each play.

user avatar

Better than you can imagine.

Calthus

What a great album. Sure they are obviously Jersey boys, but this is a must download for anyone with an emusic subscription.

user avatar

Copycats but great copycats

feonmap

So they sound like Spingsteen 35 years ago. So what. Springsteen sounded great in 1975 and so do the Gaslight Anthem!!!!!!!!!!

user avatar

Solid Solid Solid!

calypsographics

This is my go-to album when I need a pick-me-up. Great Expectations and '59 sound get things off and running strong, and are the standout tracks. The album progresses magically from there. "The Backseat" provides well visualized memories of youth and car culture, and "Here's Lookin at you Kid" seems to tell everyone's collective tale of love and loss while growing up in America. Hop in the convertible, place this on repeat, and hit the gas!

user avatar

Rock n' Roll at its finest

modom

Not only was this album my favorite album of 2008, but I'm still listening to it nearly every day two years later. And if you ever get the chance, see these guys live... best live band I've ever seen.

user avatar

More like the `89 Sound

chordophone

Aww, they're so cute.

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East Coast Old 97s

MDT

That's the sound you're going to get here... I don't get the Arcade Fire comparison at all. There's some Bruce in there though and some Paul Westerburg. If all that sounds good to you, download away. Here's a band that is just happy to be playing the Rock and Roll as if doing so still matters.

user avatar

Good, but no real shining moments.

DPLeMUSIC

I'd probably like these songs better live - the recordings seem tame and canned, and seriously half of these songs feature out of tune vocals. Still it's accessible and the stories are good, even if they are Springsteen take aways.

user avatar

Predictable

EMUSIC-008162F1

Slightly more refined than Fall Out Boy, but still sounds like teenager music. Comparing these guys to Springsteen is an insult to Jersey boys everywhere. If you're looking for modern Springsteen, check out Marah.

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eMusic Features

0

2008 Innovators: The Gaslight Anthem

By Matthew Fritch, eMusic Contributor

Reviewers of The '59 Sound, the Gaslight Anthem's second album, spent an awful lot of words describing what the record is like rather than what it is. It's difficult to blame them. The New Brunswick, N.J., band invites Bruce Springsteen comparisons not only by virtue of its Garden State birthright; there's also a restless, Born To Run energy coursing through singer/guitarist Brian Fallon's songs about small-town regrets and big-time dreams. The '59 Sound shoots straight… more »

They Say All Music Guide

In 1988, Jon Bon Jovi was being interviewed by a reporter for Spin Magazine when he was asked if he was a fan of Bruce Springsteen. Bon Jovi replied “In New Jersey, if you don’t like Springsteen they raise your taxes.” Listening to the Gaslight Anthem’s second full-length album The ’59 Sound, it’s pretty clear that leader Brian Fallon doesn’t have to worry much about his tax bill in the Garden State. Hailing from New Brunswick, NJ, the Gaslight Anthem are that rare punk band that displays a strong and unmistakable Springsteen influence, and while Fallon’s vocal resemblance to the Boss is clearly coincidental (he has more than a bit of Bruce’s throaty gravity without the grit), the boys-and-girls-on-the-backstreets tone of his lyrics is not, especially when stray fragments from Springsteen’s lyrics pop up in Fallon’s songs (cue up “Meet Me by the River’s Edge” and “High Lonesome” for evidence). If Fallon often comes off as a youthful Springsteen wannabe on The ’59 Sound, he also happens to be pretty good at it; the force and sincerity of his songs roll over the occasional clunky spots, and the band brings this music across with a strength and urgency that suggests a heartland rock version of Social Distortion, with Alex Rosamila’s guitars and Benny Horowitz’s drumming brimming with fire and energy. The Gaslight Anthem are far too good to be the New Millennium’s answer to John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown Band, but it’s all but impossible to listen to The ’59 Sound without being aware of this band’s key influence; even if they never grow out of their Springsteen obsession, they’re worth hearing, but it’s hard not to hope they’ll develop a stronger identity of their own with time…though they may want to warn their tax accountant before that happens. – Mark Deming

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