Root For Ruin

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ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 39:18

eMusic Review

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

08.08.10
A loud guitar band for people who like guitar bands and also for people who ordinarily don't
2010 | Label: Wichita Recordings / Republic Of Music

Like Nirvana or the Pixies or Hüsker Dü or the Stooges, Les Savy Fav is a loud guitar band for people who like guitar bands and also for people who ordinarily don't. Smarter, funnier, tighter and weirder than the competition, this Brooklyn quintet summons universal desperation in idiosyncratic form — riffs both savage and yet geometric, rhythms that both punch and groove, insane ranting that also delivers an intellectual tickle. And, above all, this band boasts both charisma and its opposite.

"We still got our appetites," rages frontman/madman Tim Harrington on a brutal opening cut that serves as both manifesto and summation. Fifteen years in, LSF remain hungry — for experience, sex, success, love and all the rest. While his cohorts sprint in interlocking syncopation, Harrington pushes and pulls his vocal rhythm both on and maddeningly off the beat — as if the desire of which he sings cannot be regulated or contained.

To put it another way, Les Savy Fav is both more in and out of control than ever: "Dirty Knails" ricochets between devotion and blasphemy, while the one-two punch of "Let's Get Out of Here" and "Lips 'n Stuff" ooze unchecked libido. Harrington has no… read more »

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With its fifth album, Root for Ruin, the art rock outfit continues with the sound that made Let’s Stay Friends such a refreshing change for the band, refining its angular sound with pop polish. This slower, more melodic approach really shines on “Let’s Get Out of Here,” a laid-back, Pixies-influenced track that almost casually rises and falls, showing off the band’s ability to take a chord progression and mine it for all its worth, coaxing out a breezy verse and an incredibly catchy hook that sound like they could be lost tracks from Doolittle. This more thoughtful approach also comes through on faster tracks like “Dirty Knails” and “Excess Energies,” providing a look at a Les Savy Fav who are able to be kinetic without being frenetic, showing that they can still cut loose without losing control of the song. While Root for Ruin isn’t the creative reawakening that Let’s Stay Friends was, it might be the band’s tightest and most polished album yet. At this point in their career, Les Savy Fav have evolved their style so much that any clamoring for a return to their previous form feels like stubborn nostalgia. In fact, with this current sound reaching such a level of refinement, the only question left to ask of the band is, “What’s next?” – Gregory Heaney

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