What Doesn't Kill Us

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What Doesn't Kill Us album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 37:31

eMusic Review 0

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Andrew Mueller

eMusic Contributor

09.02.08
This Austin quintet confounds alt-country expectations with mordant wit
2008 | Label: Barsuk Records

Between the heritage of What Made Milwaukee Famous 'hometown (Austin, Texas) and the name they've chosen (after Glenn Sutton's immortal tears-in-my-beer country lament, recorded by Rod Stewart and Jerry Lee Lewis, among others), one might approach WMMF expecting orthodox alt-country. One would be, at best, half right and, more likely than not, pleasantly surprised. On "What Doesn't Kill Us," their second album, the quintet draws from a wide palette with commendable invention and wit. Tracks like the keening "Resistance Street" have something of the epic ambition of Radiohead or Snow Patrol, while the toytown keyboard of "Right Place" and "Prevailing Wind" evoke the lower-fi noodlings of Sparklehorse.

Like all worthwhile acts, though, WMMF, manage to maintain the always crucial trick of sounding like no one so much as themselves. They're certainly confident enough to open with a daring subversion of expectations: rehab memoir "Blood, Sweat & Fears" comes on like Queens of the Stone Age re-imagining The Glitter Band. WMMF revert subsequently to type somewhat, emerging from the murk with "Sultan" which, like much more of their work, recalls the baleful playfulness of the Old 97s and/or the unabashed radio pop of Cheap Trick. "Cheap… read more »

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Deserving of more attention!

vak78

I saw these guys live a couple weeks ago, and they played a great, energetic set! I bought the cd at their show (because it wasn't on emusic yet), and don't regret spending the cash even a little bit. The songs are catchy, fun, and the lyrics are good. I agree with the previous review-it's hard to go wrong with bands from Barsuk. I hope more end up on emusic soon.

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Another quality band from Barsuk

EMUSIC-00D8D3CB

Glad to see Barsuk on emusic (is Death Cab for Cutie to Follow?). This album is solid throughout. No bad songs here. One of those rare ones where you don't have to skip tracks.

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They Say All Music Guide

In 2004, Austin’s What Made Milwaukee Famous self-released their debut, Trying to Never Catch Up (later re-released in 2006 in a slightly different format on Barsuk), a hodgepodge of musical styles and influences that still managed to coalesce as a strong, catchy set. These same notions prevail with the band’s second album, What Doesn’t Kill Us, although the new songs (and inspirations) tend to drive the band away from power pop and toward more mainstream rock and pop territory. There are still some well-crafted pieces here — “Self-Destruct” has predictable yet fun vocal lines and breakdowns, “Sultan” is pure Spoon (when Britt Daniel is in his Billy Joel idolizing mode), and “Resistance St.” draws from the ornate, undulating, horn-heavy style Beirut’s Zach Condon has helped popularize and develop while still sounding original. On the second half of the album, “Prevailing Wind” and “And the Grief Goes On” rely on soft acoustic guitars and mainstream radio-ready melodies to guide them, and both “Middle of the Night” and “To Each His Own” depart from Big Star pop to mid-’90s “Sister Hazel at a campfire” stuff. What Made Milwaukee Famous clearly try to end What Doesn’t Kill Us on a positive note (to contrast, perhaps, with the darker notions expressed earlier in the record), replacing their witty(ish) lyrics (“If you don’t cut your losses before you get lost, they’re never going to leave you alone,” from “Sultan”) with phrases like “Somewhere, in the middle of the night/Everything’s going to be all right, all right” (“Middle of the Night”) or “What’s the use in hope if we’re afraid of trying?” in the closer, “The Other Side.” – Marisa Brown

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