The Greatest Story Ever Told

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The Greatest Story Ever Told album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 33:11

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RobotWar

This is, hands down, the best "pop punk" album ever made: poetic, masterful, tuneful, anthemic. I use quotation marks because they are not pop punk but it is hard to pin them down. Is Husker Du pop? Punk? What about Jawbox? TLA are more like punks playing great r'n'r. If you wished Alkaline Trio was better and wrote for adults not kiddies, or if you miss the classic Jawbreaker, or if you have always loved guitar-based rock that comes from the gut, this is for YOU. TLA has evolved; their early bands and albums are nowhere near this good. Their sound on this album is perfection, it's grown up and heartrending. The mix of the two singers' styles is in perfect balance here. It's like taking "Dear You" Jawbreaker and welding it to Jawbox's "For Your Own Special...". This record is like if "Dear You" hadn't gotten mangled in the studio. Try tracks 2, 4, 8 and 10 if you're skeptical. TLA should be as big as Foo Fighters!

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They Say All Music Guide

Though the Lawrence Arms’ The Greatest Story Ever Told can’t be expected to live up to its tongue-in-cheek title, the album is a surprisingly strong set of fresh pop punk that avoids the trappings and clichés of the genre. The sputtering, old-time sounding introduction makes for a unique entryway to the sparkling and grandiose (Sunny Day Real Estate-esque) “The Raw and Searing Flesh.” “On with the Show” sounds like the Germs crossed with X, and “The March of the Elephants” thunders with an off-kilter, post-punk edge. With lyrics like “the swirl of smoke looks like her slender body,” “Fireflies” — one of the record’s best tracks — could almost be the Weakerthans or Waxwing, and if the Lawrence Arms followed suit with those groups, and added just a touch of country-rock to their work, they’d be astounding. The Greatest Story Ever Told is an album that will grow on you — it gets better and better with repeated listens, and like the Queens of the Stone Age, they use multiple vocalists to great effect, insuring that things never get repetitive or boring. Though it doesn’t depart as much from its peers as something like Saves the Day’s remarkable In Reverie, The Greatest Story spotlights the Lawrence Arms as one of the best power punk groups of 2003, and one that, with a little more genre-bending innovation, could create a real rock and roll masterpiece. – Charles Spano

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