You know how you get those bands who were just integral to your music taste as you were growing up? For a lot of people it was Blink-182, for others it was My Chemical Romance, Jimmy Eat World or Taking Back Sunday. For me and a lot of other people it was Fall Out Boy. They were the band I identified with most. Iâve made best friends through this band and I have an awful lot of memories attached to their music. I still remember the day I heard âTake This To Your Graveâ for the first time and just knowing that this was the musical path that I wanted to follow.
When Fall Out Boy announced their break, I was gutted, as would any person be who had just found out their favourite band were no longer particularly inclined to make music together. Despite constant rumours and news stories, I never really though Iâd get the buzz I got from a FOB album cycle or live show again. But here we are, itâs 2013 and I feel incredibly lucky not only to have seen my favourite band live already this year but also to be listening to some brand new music from them.
First things first, with âSave Rock and Rollâ Fall Out Boy havenât regressed, you shouldnât come into this album with any hopes of a pop punk revival from the band because you just won’t find it here. âSave Rock and Rollâ is the poppiest record yet. Itâs everything that âFolie A Deuxâ SHOULD have sounded like and then some. The opening track is the band;s latest single, âThe Phoenixâ, and itâs huge. A fitting chorus led opener is exactly what this album needed to get going, but itâs the third song in, âAlone Togetherâ, that makes the biggest impact out of the opening trio. Itâs a big Summer anthem with the bassiest of choruses and a brilliant vocal from Patrick Stump.
Unfortunately, it does seem that as soon as the album starts to get going, it derails. Two tracks that really donât quite meet the lofty expectations of the record form a double whammy that will see people reaching for the skip buttons. They arrive in the form of track five, âJust One Yesterdayâ, which sounds like Adeleâs âRolling In The Deepâ without the big chorus, and then there’s the big old mess that is track six, âThe Mighty Fallâ. Thereâs nothing to concentrate on in the bazillion things going on here, and the guest vocals from Big Sean add absolutely nothing at all.
Thankfully, from here on in ‘Save Rock and Roll’ comes into its own in a big way. In âMiss Missing Youâ, Pete Wentzâ signature lyrics come to the forefront properly (âSometimes before it gets better the darkness gets bigger, the person that you take a bullet for is behind the triggerâ), and âDeath Valleyâ has next single written all over it. ‘Young Volcanoes’ divided a few when it came out, but it’s hard to deny that it does have a hook that relentlessly drills itself into your head. ‘Rat A Tat’ is fast and laden with urgency, and you can tell the band had an absolute ball recording this one. As a result it has produced one of the best songs on the record.
Closing down the album is title track âSave Rock and Rollâ. It’s a song that will initially draw instant comparisons with fellow ballad âWhat A Catch Donnieâ from âFolie A Deuxâ, but really they couldnât be any further apart. When I first listened to the latter, all I remember is feeling sad. It was a song that in my opinion was designed to be their swan song, but âSave Rock and Rollâ feels completely different. It’s laced positivity (âoh no, we wonât go, we donât know when to quit, oh noâ) that features a career defining collaboration with Elton John, and the Patrick/Elton vocal combo that ends the song is a fitting finale to a wonderful album. The meeting that managed to make that happened must also have been an amazing one, so imagine that when you’re listening to it.
In general, a massive high point for the album rests in the vocals of Patrick Stump. Whether itâs THAT note in âThe Phoenixâ, the strong falsetto chorus in âDeath Valleyâ or just the general masterclass offered in âAlone Togetherâ, itâs clear that heâs upped his game vocally. âSave Rock and Rollâ as a whole will draw major comparisons with FOBâs previous effort âFolie A Deuxâ, but thereâs one big difference: one album tried too hard to be a pop record and ended up falling short, while the other was almost effortless and absolutely knocked it out of the park. That album is ‘Save Rock and Roll’.
Ultimately, the hiatus/time away from band/split/whatever you want to call it has done Fall Out Boy the world of good. Everything within the band has been re-evaluated, and the song writing process feels reworked – everything sounds more cohesive and fresh for it. âSave Rock and Rollâ isnât without its mistakes, but theyâre barely worth mentioning next to the brilliance that surrounds them. This album wonât be for everyone and it will continue to divide just as every Fall Out Boy album before it has done. If you donât like pop tinged with rock, you wonât like this album and thatâs fine. Based on this outing, Fall Out Boy have got a brilliant future lying ahead of them. As for me, Iâm just glad to have my favourite band back.
CHRIS MARSHMAN