Subliminable Messages

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Subliminable Messages album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 32:00

eMusic Features

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Baseball Music

By Dan Epstein, eMusic Contributor

Baseball and music are the twin obsessions of my life, but beyond drunken 7th inning renditions of "Take Me out to the Ballgame," I've always been fairly dubious about the wisdom of combining the two. Having grown up in an era where the only music heard at the ballpark came from a ghostly-sounding organ perched behind the press box, I find something extraordinarily distasteful about players running out onto the field to tune of '80s… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Just as 2003′s War on Errorism established the activism wing of the NOFX party house, Ten Foot Pole makes a clear and present turn toward punk rock consciousness-raising on Subliminable Messages, its Go-Kart Records debut. There’s that title for one thing, and a lament for “Rachel Corrie,” the young American peace activist killed in the Gaza Strip in 2003. There’s also “Wake Up (And Smell the Fascism),” where vocalist Dennis Jagard calls for awareness and action from all those self-righteous hardcore kids making homemade social injustice backpack patches. Jagard and his rejiggered TFP lineup (new bassist, new lead guitarist) are obviously very passionate about the state of our union. But for all their anger, Subliminable’s songwriting has a tendency to falter. The bitter relationship woe of “With You by My Side” and “Your World” is certainly cathartic, but musically the tracks are dot-connecting Cali punk in the vein of NOFX, Bad Religion, or even Pennywise. Still, Ten Foot Pole’s honesty goes a long way, whether they’re musing on politics, romance, or the pain of dealing with a drug-addicted pal. “Kicked Out of Kindergarten” is filled with fun memories of a rambunctious childhood (“Saw the principal for crimes…like spitting on blonde-braided Karen Edwards…”), while “She Looks Like” is the promising punk-pop opposite of the album’s more cynical passages, detailing your typical skater Betty crush. Longtime TFP fans will be happy to see Jagard back with another lineup. And while it isn’t the band’s strongest effort, Subliminable Messages’ hearty lyrical honesty is admirable, and closer to punk’s truest roots than any sunny hook. – Johnny Loftus

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