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Fucked Up - One Day (2023) Hi-Res

Fucked Up - One Day (2023) Hi-Res

BAND/ARTIST: Fucked Up

  • Title: One Day
  • Year Of Release: 2023
  • Label: Merge Records
  • Genre: Alternative, Post-Punk, Punk Rock
  • Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz
  • Total Time: 39:56
  • Total Size: 94 / 275 / 855 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Found (3:49)
02. I Think I Might Be Weird (3:17)
03. Huge New Her (4:18)
04. Lords of Kensington (4:08)
05. Broken Little Boys (2:47)
06. Nothing's Immortal (3:00)
07. Falling Right Under (4:22)
08. One Day (5:02)
09. Cicada (4:29)
10. Roar (4:44)

Fucked Up have spent two decades reimagining the rock band as a kind of research laboratory. No appreciation of the Toronto collective is complete without a litany of the experiments they’ve undertaken, and I won’t break with tradition here: Fucked Up have been a brawny, elemental hardcore band, as heard on their early 7″ output. They’ve expanded that sound into a kind of proggy chamber-punk, as on The Chemistry Of Common Life. They’ve tackled the double-album rock opera, first with the melodic but muscular David Comes To Life and later with the gleefully all-over-the-place Dose Your Dreams. They’ve made nine EPs inspired by the signs of the Chinese Zodiac. Last year, they released the stomping, sludgy Oberon, veering as close to metal as they ever have. That list covers maybe a quarter of the identities Fucked Up have embodied over the years. Words like “eclectic” and “chameleonic” are inadequate.
Fucked Up are one-of-one.

Exploring all those guises has led Fucked Up to release a truly staggering amount of music, but proper full-lengths are still a relative rarity in their discography. One Day is just their sixth long-player, and their first in nearly five years. It is, by definition, their most experimental album to date, following the scientific meaning of an experiment as a test carried out to see what will happen under a particular set of conditions. The set of conditions for One Day is laid out in its title. Vocalist Damian Abraham, guitarist Mike Haliechuk, bassist Sandy Miranda, and drummer Jonah Falco had just 24 hours to write and track their parts. If past Fucked Up experiments were expansionary by nature – What if we opened a hardcore record with a flute solo? What if we played a 12-hour set? – then One Day is the first that was deliberately restrictive.

The restrictions paid dividends. One Day is the shortest Fucked Up full-length to date, its 10 punchy songs totaling just 40 minutes. It’s also their tightest and most focused. Anyone who’s ever been on deadline can attest to the almost supernatural power of a hard and fast time constraint, and it seems the 24-hour limit brought out the best in everyone. Haliechuk went first, stacking his bright, power-pop-inspired guitar parts in dense layers and forming the core of the songs. (The band’s wall-of-guitars sound used to be attributable to their triple-axe attack, but Ben Cook left the band in 2021, and Josh Zucker doesn’t appear on One Day. It’s all Haliechuk here.) Falco and Miranda added their drums and bass – Falco from the UK, Miranda from Toronto – taking Haliechuk’s twinkling guitars and giving them weight and propulsion. Abraham went last, writing lyrics for half the songs and stretching his reliably jagged yowl over all of them except the Haliechuk-fronted “Cicada.”

The four core members of Fucked Up put in their 24-hour shifts in isolation, but ironically, One Day might be the album where they sound the most like a band. Every other Fucked Up album has been a guest-heavy affair, culminating in Dose Your Dreams, which was so committed to its broader-ensemble approach that it asked Abraham to step away from the mic for long stretches. Haliechuk, Miranda, Falco, and Abraham are the only people who appear on One Day, and it’s refreshing to hear them lock in as a unit over the course of a full album the way they often do on their non-LP material. One Day isn’t a back-to-basics hardcore record, but it shares a certain sense of intimacy with those early 7″s — albeit a more sympathetic one. For years, Fucked Up played up in interviews that they didn’t really like one another, and that their collaboration was fueled by animus. If that’s still true, they’re doing a hell of a job hiding it.




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