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Brand New - The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me (2006)

Brand New - The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me (2006)

BAND/ARTIST: Brand New

  • Title: The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me
  • Year Of Release: 2006
  • Label: Interscope Records
  • Genre: Alternative, Indie Rock
  • Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks+.cue artwork)
  • Total Time: 1:00:16
  • Total Size: 236 / 486 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

00. Voices (Hidden track) (1:16)
01. Sowing Season (4:31)
02. Millstone (4:17)
03. Jesus (5:18)
04. Degausser (5:33)
05. Limousine (MS Rebridge) (7:42)
06. You Won't Know (5:42)
07. Welcome to Bangkok (3:06)
08. Not the Sun (3:10)
09. Luca (5:09)
10. -- (2:04)
11. The Archers Bows Have Broken (4:15)
12. Handcuffs (4:11)
13. Luca Reprisal (4:02)

At the turn of the century, emo had finally gone pop, but hadn’t felt like music for popular kids. On Clear Channel playlists, “The Middle” and “Screaming Infidelities” were boyish, bashful contrast to the goateed bullies of nu-grunge and rap-metal and the New Rock Revival’s trouser-stuffing sexuality. But while Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard Confessional were extensions of the church basement and DIY house scenes that fostered Christie Front Drive, the Get Up Kids, and the Promise Ring, they would soon be overtaken by the likes of Brand New, Taking Back Sunday, and plenty of bands who were basically jocks in ringer T’s: they were loud, rude, and thought about little other than sex. The Long Island band’s 2001 debut Your Favorite Weapon helped establish the sound and the gender politics for a time when emo would draw in more fans of both sexes than ever before, but often cleared the room of people who expected punk rock to be a welcoming or progressive environment. To this day, “Emo Night” most likely means drunken 20-somethings yelling along with “Jude Law and a Semester Abroad.”

After the potent but obnoxious venting of Your Favorite Weapon, Brand New’s ambitions started to emerge two years later on Deja Entendu—they hired a guy who engineered Pixies records to produce it, wrote the acoustic weeper “The Boy Who Blocked His Own Shot” to prove they’d heard the Smiths, and added a guitar solo on “Good to Know That if I Ever Need Attention All I Have to Do is Die” that veered so close to “Hotel California” it proved they’d probably never heard the Eagles. But frontman Jesse Lacey still inhabited a stunted, vindictive emotional viewpoint—even as he spent considerable time staring at an empty bottle, ruefully recounting the failure of copious sex and substances to provide him with any lasting happiness, he was just as quick to boast about a lifestyle that let him basically fuck and drink however much he wanted: “I wouldn’t stop if I could/Oh it hurts to be this good,” he admitted on “Okay I Believe You, But My Tommy Gun Don’t.” His flexing and his self-loathing were both forms of the same narcissism: In this way, he was almost proto-Drake.

Brand New jumped from Triple Crown to Interscope after Deja Entendu, and no one would’ve been surprised if major-label money and expectations would’ve caused Lacey to go even deeper into his vices. But based on the ensuing Fight Off Your Demons demos, Lacey was at least willing to make an effort to be the better man. “Brother’s Song” and “1996” were worldly and warm, allowing someone else’s story to be told for once. But this embryonic version of Brand New’s third album was leaked by overzealous fans (and sold back to them a decade later), causing a disillusioned and emotionally violated Lacey to retreat inward again. By the time The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me was completed, he may have realized that the world didn’t revolve around him—but he was now the dark center of the universe, a howling spiritual void.



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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 15:10
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 13:17
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Many Thanks
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  • ingeborg
  •  wrote in 20:47
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Many Thanks