Weezerpedia:Featured article: Difference between revisions
no edit summary
(messed up the italics) |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<noinclude> '''See [[Help:Featured Article]] for instructions on editing this page.''' </noinclude> | <noinclude> '''See [[Help:Featured Article]] for instructions on editing this page.''' </noinclude> | ||
{{Featured article headline|[[ | {{Featured article headline|[[Make Believe Pitchfork Media record review]]}} | ||
[[Image: | [[Image:Weezer Make Believe.jpg|175px|right|link=Make Believe Pitchfork Media record review|thumb]] | ||
''' | '''{{PN|Pitchfork Media}} [[Make Believe Pitchfork Media record review|album review]] for ''[[Make Believe]]''''' was published on [[May 8]], [[2005]]. It was written by [https://pitchfork.com/staff/rob-mitchum/ Rob Mitchum] and awarded the album a somewhat bombastic 0.4 stars out of 10, marking a significant change in the critical discourse around Weezer's output. Below is an excerpt. | ||
---- | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
''The | ''Sometimes an album is just awful. ''Make Believe'' is one of those albums. | ||
''[[Weezer]] have been given a lot of breaks in their second era-- both ''[[The Green Album]]'' and ''[[Maladroit]]'' were cut miles of slack despite consisting of little more than slightly above-average power-pop. The obvious reason for this lenience has to do with the mean age of rock critics, and the fact that most of these mid-20s scribes were at their absolute peak for bias-forming melodrama when ''[[The Blue Album]]'' and ''[[Pinkerton]]'' were released. Even for someone like me, who came late to the Weezer appreciation club, it was impossible to hear these "comeback" albums without the echoes of the earlier alt-rock pillars ringing in our ears. | |||
''But now there's an antidote to that nostalgic interference. Right from the start of ''Make Believe'', when Weezer lurches into [[Beverly Hills|a flaccid take]] on Joan Jett's "I Love Rock N' Roll" with an unfathomably horrible speak/sing vocal from [[Rivers Cuomo]] (think "I like girls who wear Abercrombie & Fitch"), you can hear hundreds of critics mouthing "no no no" and going into crumpled shock. What's more disconcerting is that the song gets worse over the course of its three minutes (let's just say "Framptonesque voicebox solo" and get back to repressing the memory)-- and it's the album's first single.'' | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
{{Featured article links| | {{Featured article links|Make Believe Pitchfork Media record review}} | ||
<noinclude>[[Category:Weezerpedia]]</noinclude> | <noinclude>[[Category:Weezerpedia]]</noinclude> | ||