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Go tell your friends taking back sunday
Go tell your friends taking back sunday







go tell your friends taking back sunday

“So sick so sick of being tired, and oh so tired of being sick.” Later, a chorus-slash-manifesto arrives alongside guitars that hit like an electrical current’s surge. Frontman Adam Lazzara-a microphone masochist with the swooping hair of a Funko Pop! figurine-delivers the album’s opening lines as if he’s been waiting his whole life to do it. On Tell All Your Friends, every instrument pushes against each other. Guitarist Eddie Reyes had played in bands including the Movielife, and the call-and-response vocals of another former band, Clockwise, inspired Adam Lazzara and John Nolan’s fevered duels. The hooks of the Get Up Kids, the intensity of Thursday, and the post-rockish flourishes of Cap’n Jazz come together in Taking Back Sunday’s taut, poppy anthems, while also leaving a breadcrumb trail for fans to go deeper into the genre. Their sound, though, had tell-tale antecedents in Long Island’s thriving late-’90s punk scene and post-hardcore across the nation. The stretch of grey highway depicted on the cover of their debut album Tell All Your Friends is about as region-specific as a McDonald’s. In 1999, the five-piece formed in Amityville, New York, leading their then-label Victory Records to proclaim that “a city that has been synonymous with nothing but horror since the 1979 release of The Amityville Horror is about to be redefined.” But given the near-universal concerns of their landmark debut Tell All Your Friends-heartbreak, jealousy, and depression, elevated to an operatic intensity-the five-piece could have come from just about any out-of-the-way place in the U.S.

go tell your friends taking back sunday

Taking Back Sunday’s members came from the kind of suburban towns that have a way of magnifying anxiety, isolation, and paranoia into high-stakes urgency.









Go tell your friends taking back sunday