For Your Own Special Sweetheart - Reissue

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 51:11

eMusic Review

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Jon Dolan

eMusic Contributor

12.09.09
A fantastically unlikely major-label-debut and a touchstone for emo
2009 | Label: DeSoto Records / IODA

Jawbox's major label debut was a totally unnecessary yet counter-intuitively wondrous thing: a Fugazi record about sex and heartbreak. The DC band was the first Dischord act to jump to a major, and they're one of the rare bands that improved in the process. Singer-guitarist J Robbins' sounds at once plaintive and gruff as he sings things like "hey, angel, fly over, and bless me," against hot-angled twin-guitar churn and fulsome punk-jazz rhythm rumble — made even fulsomer by Ted Nicely's depth-perceptive production. "Savory" and "Cooling Card" grazed MTV with a worried heroism that might sucker in a Pearl Jam fan, while "U-Trau" and "Reel" translated post-hardcore grind into elegiac alt-rock. The push-pull music gave Robbins' opaque evocations of romantic tumult a sense of optimism in the face of aneurysm. It'd be a eureka moment for scads of emo bands (it's fitting Robbins became a go-to producer for the genre). Even the one that evokes JG Ballard ("Motorist") has a heart, even the flashes of hate-spiked Gang of Four churn resolve in something vaguely tender, and, most heartening, the word "valentine" has the same emotional valence as the word "product." Fifteen years later, what might've been one more errant attempt… read more »

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Their best album

kenta

Dense, jagged, and noisy, Jawbox actually got less accessible for their major label debut. If the album has a flaw, it's that after the pummeling brilliance of the first four tracks, it would be almost impossible for the rest of the album to keep up (though it comes close). This version also appends the three b-sides from the "Savory + 3" EP, which were all great, especially Big Boys cover "Sound On Sound".

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Quintessential Jawbox

anisa.allen

This album best represents the Jawbox sound. "68" and "Sound on Sound" (Originally part of the Savory + 3 EP) are two of the best B-Sides I have ever heard in the 18 years I have been heavily in to music. Download and enjoy!

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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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