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The Used - Lies For The Liars (Cln) (CD)

Lies For The Liars (Cln)
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Album Details: Lies For The Liars (Cln)

Release Date:05/22/2007
Label:Reprise / Wea
UPC:093624997832

Pro Reviews: Lies For The Liars (Cln)

  • All Music Guide

    It isn't completely fair to compare the Used to My Chemical Romance, despite their associations in the past (they covered Queen and David Bowie's "Under Pressure" as a team) and surface similarities. the Used have deeper roots in punk (there's a reason why former drummer Branden Steineckert hightailed it for a gig with Rancid), and they always were more purely emo than MCR. Nevertheless, the Used's third studio album, Lies for the Liars, sure brings to mind The Black Parade, particularly in how the Used pile on lurid, florid art rock trappings upon their poppunk, borrowing vocal arrangements from Queen and imagery from The Wall (this time, it's the worms); the album also has a song called "Hospital" that recalls the deathbed escapades of Gerard Way. But where Lies for the Liars really shares similarities with The Black Parade is in how it's a bigbudget escalation of the band's sound designed to leave the emo tag behind. While there's a haze of pretension hanging over some of the record... nowhere more so than on the awful single "The Bird and the Worm," a noisy hookless cluster of staccato strings, druid vocals, and narcissistic emo romanticism this plays more poppy than proggy, as the Used dabble in all sorts of classic pop sounds, kicking off the album with a sleek, echoey new wave guitar and then spiking the chorus of "With Me Tonight" with blaring horns straight out of Chicago. All this flair gives Lies for the Liars some lightness if not levity, since the Used is, like all bands of their ilk, a very serious band, diligently plundering the deep uncharted avenues of the soul. Try as they may to inject some humor into their music the mockshuffle on "Paralyzed," the twostep gallop of "With Me Tonight," the "liar, liar pants on fire" chorus of "Liar Liar (Burn in Hell)," which was probably meant ironically but sure doesn't play that way this is a relentlessly sober affair, churning with glum guitars and an eternally adolescent sincerity. It's not funny, it's not fun, but it wasn't meant to be: it was meant as a collection of tortured love songs ("Earthquake" and "Find a Way" boasting the sweetest melody and harmonies here) and teenage solidarity anthems ("Pretty Handsome Awkward," which winds up sounding like a clumsy comeon). Ironically enough, that splashy production and infusion of pop on Lies for the Liars may very well keep away the adolescents who stuck with the band throughout their first two records there's nothing that angsty teenagers like better than aggression, which isn't necessarily absent here, but it is tempered and may keep them from speaking to any listener a few years removed from college. [A clean version of the CD was also released.] - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Used

The members of the Used had to overcome homelessness and substance abuse, not to mention the strait-laced attitudes of their hometown of Orem, UT, to make their brand of hard rock. But they persevered and earned a contract with Reprise Records, releasing their self-titled debut album in June 2002. - William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide Read more