Achilles Heel

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Achilles Heel album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:19

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Can we say 3 1/2 stars?

chickenfoof

Truthfully, this sounds like Dave running out of steam (although the backlash from Control certainly served to take some of the steam out). On the down side, “Keep Swinging” should have never been recorded by anyone, even privately, and several other songs here positively drag (I mean, even for a Pedro album). On the positive side, some of the most upbeat tunes you’ll ever find on a Pedro album can also be found here, including “Start Without Me,” “The Fleecing,” and the cream of the crop, “Foregone Conclusions,” the single-that-never-was which did Dave even less favors with the CCM crowd but contains one of the greatest couplets of the millennium thus far (you'll know it when you hear it).

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They Say All Music Guide

Achilles’ Heel, Pedro the Lion’s fifth album, is a hallmark for the band, a culmination of their previous work, and — upon its release — their best album to date. Breaking down the linear narratives of The Only Reason I Feel Secure and Control into broader concepts and themes that rely far less on storytelling and more on topical personal politics turns out to be a winning approach. Walking through the emotional fray of America’s suburban ennui, David Bazan and company have built a beautiful and wavering mix of indie rock and country-folk. Ester Drang keyboardist James McAlister is a shining addition to Bazan and longtime contributor T.W. Walsh, adding a syrupy keyboard undercurrent to contrast Bazan’s longing melodies and lyrics — and the guitar work reaches new levels of uncharacteristic gritty rock on the venomous “Keep Swinging” (don’t expect it for more than one track, though). With some of the best songs of the band’s career — the classic, simple, country-tinged “Foregone Conclusions” and the lush, soaring “The Fleecing,” for example — Pedro the Lion cast themselves as a Neil Young for the tract homes and convenience stores, a middle-class hero for those caught in the mundane space between the McMansions and the nine-to-five grind. Bazan is a master of this stuff, delving through the routine and ordinary for every drop of melancholy and poetry. While lilting and humorless (don’t expect anything as fun as the Darkness here), these songs are like literature set to music, the indie rock counterpart to a novel like A.M. Homes’ The Safety of Objects — maybe a little tough to swallow or make it all the way through, but brilliantly rendered nonetheless. – Charles Spano

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