Album Review: Fucked Up - The Chemistry of Common Life
What happens when you mesh Billy Talent with Henry Rollins, Blur and Sex Pistols? First, you get chaos akin to Canadian hockey with rioting soccer fans… then you get Fucked Up (in more ways than one). This hardcore band from Toronto is not your typical group of polite Canadians, but one has to admire its straightforward, no bullshit band name.
2008 sees the release of Fucked Up’s second full-length album, The Chemistry of Common Life. After this group’s constant string of EPs, dedicated solely to vinyl due to the band’s disdain for CDs, one has to assume that this new album is a means to simply get noticed beyond its punk roots. That, or they decided to step up its game.
“Son of Father” begins this maniacal train ride, avoiding a complete train wreck immediately with brutal fuzz and triumphant vocals from Pink Eyes; it’s a fine opener, and well worth hearing. Next, there’s a dose of tribal snare drum and Rollins-style raving in “Magic Word”, which leads into the apocalyptic feeling of “Golden Seal.” This track actually resembles the landscape of the album cover - Manhattan skylines mixed with that lifeless world seen in films, I Am Legend or 28 Days Later. It’s a soothing instrumental, but also haunting with something that mirrors Radiohead’s capacity in its distorted synth and MIDI mania. Coincidentally, the aftermath of the said track delivers us to, “Days of Last”, which is well-placed in both mood and title, despite its old-school Offspring influences (save for the vocals).
“Crooked Head” is again on Offspring bandwagon, only more so; sadly, a throwaway. “No Epiphany” is what would happen if Oasis started going punk, which is not that far from the truth considering Noel Galagher’s antics over the past few years. “Black Albino Bones” has everything punk and everything pop tossed into the grinder and spiked with cyanide, while “Royal Swan” harkens back to “Golden Seal” with lengthy synths and genre-bending crosshairs, aimed at the haters with vocals meant to terrify. Another fine instrumental gains headway with “Looking for God”, which most definitely feels sarcastic, as if Pink Eyes knows the search is a moot point and allows 10,000 marbles the crack at it (yes, that is a band member name). As we depart, we come to the all-important closer.
The longest track on this album (with “Son of Father” trailing at 6:33) is the final track which typically bodes well for an already excellent release. “The Chemisry of Common Life” isn’t what one normally compares to a closing track, with a relatively short introduction for what builds up to be an epic title track. However, the song itself is packed with such a namesake as we delve into garage band drums and power chords twisted into high-notes galore. Pink Eyes goes postal (think: Henry Rollins) as he has everywhere else on this release, but this time he feels much more passionate - as if this is his dying breath. This holds true even into the grandiose final sounds of “The Chemistry…”.
All in all, it’s great to hear a new punk album that holds its ground in the as-of-late decimated genre. Sure, we have our various examples of why punk is supposedly dead (part of the blame goes to TRL), amongst the reasons why rock and roll is being replaced by alternative in ways both good, bad, and ugly. Either way you flip the coin, Fucked Up remains on the side recognized by the fans of punk both old and new, while shunned by corporations for its constant reliance on vinyl or (most assuredly) its name.
Rating: 




Check Out:
“No Epiphany”
“Twice Born”
The Chemistry of Common Life is available October 7th via Matador Records…













Hey anon they do in fact have one other offcial album out. They have a fuck ton of splits and Eps out but non are full length offcials except for this one and Hidden World.
yea what, the record is shit compared to the last but the offspring? nah.
and it’s football innit.
I notice a lot of activity on the album cover.
Again, another radical representation of a man (or a woman) hiding behind the brilliant disguise of Anonymous. This is what I’ll do:
You write a review… and perhaps if its not a joke, I’ll run it.
But I’m in a joking mood too, so be sure to be very, very, very serious.
This may or may not be one of the stupidest fucking reviews I’ve ever read. I’m leaning towards “may”:
A. It is painfully obvious that you’ve never heard of the band before downloading this album (which you must have done, because a promo copy would have AT LEAST come with a one-sheet that would have told you that their past full-length sounded a little like this one and that this is, like, their fourth CD release), which makes the review pointless, as it is filled with historical errors and dumb comparisons (do you honestly think Pink Eyes sounds like Henry Rollins?)
B. You don’t mention the depth of the lyrics… I would not care for Fucked Up as much as I do if their lyrics were not just as deep and expansive as their music. Magic Word has some seriously introspective ideas in it… give it another listen.
C. Blur, The Offspring, Oasis, The Sex Pistols? What type of music do you listen to man!?!? My Bloody Valentine, Sonic Youth, Buzzcocks, Negative Approach would be a tad bit more descriptive. When did The Offspring produce anything even remotely similar to any of these songs?
Maybe this review is a joke… the line comparing them to Billy Talent has me thinking that you really like Fucked Up, but enjoy pissing off fan-boys like myself more.
how the fuck did you get a hold of this album??? I cant find it anywhere!!!
Sep 22nd, 2009 at 10:31 am
[...] Canada did the same, awarding the 2009 Polaris Music Prize to none other than Fucked Up’s The Chemistry of Common Life. Led by Pink Eyes (you may know him best from Fox News), the six-piece outfit beat out the likes of [...]
Dec 5th, 2008 at 9:35 am
[...] The Chemistry of Common of Common Life, the 12 hour shows and covers with Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig, the fine folks of Fucked Up [...]
Oct 15th, 2008 at 5:37 pm
[...] Moby, Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig, Vivian Girls, and lots of Colt 45. In case you didn’t stop by Rogan NYC between 2 p.m. and 2 a.m. yesterday, those are among the musicians and empty cans of beer you missed at Fucked Up’s 12-hour marathon. Les Savy Fav’s Tim Harrington showed up too as did Dinosaur Jr.’s J Mascis, all to offer a bit of guest support during the Toronto’s outfit’s day long concert in support of its recently released studio album, The Chemistry of Common Life. [...]
Oct 3rd, 2008 at 12:28 pm
[...] 12 hours of their life battling for a Camry. Hot off the release of its latest studio endeavor, The Chemistry Of Common Life, the Toronto based outfit has announced plans for a full-fledged world tour, which will include one [...]
Oct 3rd, 2008 at 6:04 am
[...] Consequence of Sound [...]
Sep 30th, 2008 at 4:04 am
[...] Consequence of Sound [...]