
For once, an album title doesn’t lie.
Righteous Jams - Business As UsualPosted by Tim Karan on 01-Mar-07 @ 01:43 PM
[2/5] Boston hardcore is seemingly on the decline this year. Not only have Mental and Think I Care broken up, but the newest effort from Righteous Jams, Business As Usual, is lacking at best. And while the group's sound was never a groundbreaking one, Business As Usual, more than anything else, finds them simply treading water. Their slow, churning style is one that quickly establishes a groove and does absolutely nothing to deviate from it. "Nothing Happens (Til It Happens)" exemplifies this point perfectly, as the two-chord progression found at the beginning of the song is the very same progression that all three minutes of the track build off. The vocals, like the instrumentation, are slowly and rather lifelessly delivered; only when there are a few sporadic guitar solos toward some of the songs' ends do things change at all. Simply uninspired. (ABACUS) Jordan Rogowski
Official Website: http://www.abacusrecordings.com
|
Also in this issue:
- Killswitch Engage
- Samiam
- The Walkmen
- Melvins
- The Killers
- Squarepusher
- Bad Astronaut
- Beck
- It Dies Today
- Owen
- The Prize Fighter Inferno
- Badly Drawn Boy
- Califone
- The Dears
- Electric Six
- Mute Math
- Joanna Newsom
- Swan Lake
- TV On The Radio
- Deftones
- The Esoteric
- Four Letter Lie
- Fucked Up
- The Haunted
- Scars Of Tomorrow
- Totimoshi
- Twelve Tribes
- Cities
- DJ Logic
- Jandek
- Cale Parks
- Subtle
- Other sections...





























[2/5] Boston hardcore is seemingly on the decline this year. Not only have Mental and Think I Care broken up, but the newest effort from Righteous Jams, Business As Usual, is lacking at best. And while the group's sound was never a groundbreaking one, Business As Usual, more than anything else, finds them simply treading water. Their slow, churning style is one that quickly establishes a groove and does absolutely nothing to deviate from it. "Nothing Happens (Til It Happens)" exemplifies this point perfectly, as the two-chord progression found at the beginning of the song is the very same progression that all three minutes of the track build off. The vocals, like the instrumentation, are slowly and rather lifelessly delivered; only when there are a few sporadic guitar solos toward some of the songs' ends do things change at all. Simply uninspired. (ABACUS) Jordan Rogowski
Official Website: 
