Description
“‘Paramore’ is both the bands most polished and messiest album, which somehow pays off. If its grown-up and professional sounding… it takes that tack in service of the songs, and does so in balancing out an explosive shot of styles and attitudes. We get touches of New Wave, pop-punk, funk, alt-rock, pop, balladry, and even a series of ukelele interludes. If the album wasnt so essentially Paramore (doing their new thing), it would feel restless and disorganized; instead, it feels too kinetic to be circumscribed.
That sort of commotion benefits from a youthful approach. Punkish opener Fast in My Car announces the bands desire to just kick back and have fun. It would be a bit of misdirection (and mistake) if you were to read it as a statement for the album, but these songs are bright and sound optimistic even when they arent. The albums deepest breath, Hate to See Your Heart Break, goes through pain and resolves the problem with a touch of naivete: For all the things that youre alive to feel / Just let the pain remind you hearts can heal. If Hayley Williamss vocals werent so convincing, Id be convinced I was getting too old for this stuff.
As young as the album feels at times, it doesnt feel puerile. The songwritings smart enough to be reflective without becoming heavy or brooding. Aint It Fun bursts childhood ideas about the pleasures of growing up, but the song, despite itself, is fun, especially when the gospel choir kicks in with Dont go crying to your mama, lightening the tone of the song, offering a release from what a meditation that could have weighed itself down in its own irony. [A sidenote: some awards should pair the band with Robert Randolph for this one.]
The bands confidence comes out in the ukelele interludes, which should fall flat, but offer new takes into whats going on throughout ‘Paramore’. If theres a burst of styles and motion, theres also an ever-tightening sound and a willingness to sit down and think. The tracks add some fragility to the pound of the rest of the album, enabling a fuller vision to cohere.
Now, wisely released as a single, provides the most emblematic track on the album. Its a smartly written, addictively hooky song that relies on muscle as much as on pop. The chorus sounds like a kids anthem If theres a future, we want it! and the repeated Theres a time and a place to die, and this aint it! howls out like a teenage battle cry. The desire stems not from bright-eyed hope, though, but from a defiant wisdom, born of the experience of failure. Combining the two aspects in this borderland adds extra potency for the song. It would be even more remarkable if Paramore didnt apply that sort of creativity across the entire album.” – Pop Matters (8/10)
Compact Disc pressing
Tracklist:
1. Fast In My Car
2. Now
3. Grow Up
4. Daydreaming
5. Interlude: Moving On
6. Ain’t It Fun
7. Part II
8. Last Hope
9. Still Into You
10. Anklebiters
11. Interlude: Holiday
12. Proof
13. Hate To See Your Heart Break
14. (One Of Those) Crazy Girls
15. Interlude: I’m Not Angry Anymore
16. Be Alone
17. Future






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