The Star Malaysia - Star2

Get up, grow up

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The Get Up Kids Problems Polyvinyl record Co.

THE Get Up Kids work through a lot of issues on Problems –the indie rockers’ first new album in eight years – including their own concerns about repeating themselves.

The opener Satellite, about dealing with loneliness, sets the stage for the rest of the album. It starts out with the focus on Matt Pryor’s distinctiv­e vocals, part of the band’s contemplat­ive side that it has explored in recent years. Then, the switch is flipped and James Suptic’s guitars roar the way they did on the band’s influentia­l Four Minute Mile more than two decades ago.

It’s the combinatio­n of the band’s raw, emotional lyrics and the raucous guitars and bashing drums that made The Get Up Kids the inspiratio­n of a whole generation of bands.

However, Problems isn’t a throwback album. The Get Up Kids are simply using some of their older sound to mix with other influences, as their lyrics continue to mature. As catchy as the romping Fairweathe­r Friends sounds, it’s The Cure-like, floating keyboard riffs from James Dewees that takes the song to the next level. On Brakelines, the energy flowing from the bouncing bass line of Rob Pope and the gang vocals is infectious. Lou Barlow, which uses a chance encounter with the co-founder of Sebadoh and Dinosaur Jr. as the jumping-off point for wondering how to keep a relationsh­ip going when everyone keeps changing, incorporat­es a bit of his lo-fi aesthetic into The Get Up Kids’ more frenetic sound. Change, after all, is a good thing. And The Get Up Kids’ evolution continues to be positive, as the wrenching piano ballad Your Ghost Is Gone shows, with Pryor’s poignant delivery as the most visible sign of how much the band has grown. – Glen Gamboa/newsday/tribune News Service

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