|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Defend Yourself

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (6 ratings)
Defend Yourself album cover
01
I Will
3:57 $0.99
02
Love You Here
3:33 $0.99
03
Beat
4:12 $0.99
04
Defend yr Self
3:12 $0.99
05
Oxygen
3:21 $0.99
06
Once
2:55 $0.99
07
Inquiries
2:01 $0.99
08
State of Mine
3:44 $0.99
09
Final Days
4:22 $0.99
10
Can't Depend
4:23 $0.99
11
Let It Out
4:29 $0.99
12
Listen
3:37 $0.99
13
Separate
1:59 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 45:45

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

09.17.13
Fourteen years later, the angst is still there
2013 | Label: Joyful Noise Recordings / SC Distribution

What can it mean when a band whose defining trait was angst comes back after 14 years and sounds exactly the same? That’s Sebadoh’s Defend Yourself, their first full album since 1999′s The Sebadoh, whose ballad-heaviness made it among the lesser-loved items in the band’s catalog. The folks who missed the gnarlier guitars and faster tempos of classics like 1994′s Bakesale have their wish granted here. Defend Yourself is outright sprightly in places, whatever the lyrical temper: “This is how we waste our time,” Lou Barlow croons on the pop-punky “Oxygen.” He also milks his depressive streak for laughs on “State of Mine”: “Failure is a state of mine…It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done/ And I haven’t even done it yet.” He’s helped up from the slough by the riffs — Jason Loewenstein’s guitar parts are springy throughout, even when the words are as wound up as when both men were a lot younger. Yet the album carries its makers’ age gracefully — the craft makes even the crabbier moments sing.

Write a Review 0 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

4

This Is Your Life: Lou Barlow

By Robert Ham, eMusic Contributor

Lou Barlow has never been averse to opening old wounds. In fact, the very thing that's allowed his work with Sebadoh and the Folk Implosion — as well as the songs he contributed to Dinosaur Jr. — to get such a firm grip on listeners is his unflinching dissection of love, jealousy and obsession. So, it's no surprise that when Barlow sat down with eMusic's Robert Ham in the kitchen of Portland's Bunk Bar recently… more »