Album Review: The Men - Tomorrow's Hits



Let’s enter the conversation in the proper context: The Men, hailing from Brooklyn, came to prominence with their 2011 album Leave Home, a sweltering, abrasive, uneasy album with dark noise and vocals that resembled a man hacking up a lung; it was an album that kept your heart beating faster than you could ever have anticipated. 2012 brought Open Your Heart, which took their harsh tones and intense energy, and compressed their 7-minute-long jams into 3-minute blistery punk love songs. By 2013’s release, New Moon, The Men had become a fully-fledged country punk band, introducing acoustic guitar, piano, and electric lap steel guitar into their songs. They still carried with them their knack for raucous energy, but transformed it into a studio country-alt-rock record.

In 2014, enter the saxophone.

It’s been made extremely clear through this year’s release, Tomorrow’s Hits, we are no longer referring to the abrasive noise-punk band when we mention THE MEN. True, they still rock. But The Men have become an entirely new entity in their music. The process had seemed fairly unclear in the beginning. I had the idea that the Brooklyn outfit were radically changing from album to album, and that 2014 or 2015 would bring them either full circle to another noise album, or they would be even further out into uncharted territory. But Tomorrow’s Hits treads steadily along the footsteps of its older brother, New Moon. There is still a country twang and a gilded sunset-tinge of Americana in The Men’s writing. What the band has chosen to delve further into is its experience in studio recording. These rock songs have silvery shining guitar leads, swells from lap steel and pinky slides, hums from electric organ, harmonica interludes, and horn lines that meet at the intersection of American doo wop and honky-tonk.

The album’s highlights are deeply enriched in vintage U-S-of-A rock & roll nostalgia. “Dark Waltz,” the opening cut, pops out of nowhere in a straight-ahead early Tom Petty rock song of cool gain from the guitars and lyrical coo of old wrong-side-of-the-tracks songwriting. “Another Night” bursts with late sixties styled rock horns that mesh somewhere between older Nick Drake and early Blood, Sweat & Tears. The album’s first single, “Pearly Gates,” is probably their most accessible for fans of The Men’s earlier albums. It is their fastest track, with pushing rhythmic guitars and slurring vocals that remind me heavily of Bob Dylan or Lou Reed (and an excellent stuttering lyric that lends my ear to Roger Daltry).

I’ll admit, I’d been hoping for The Men to return to their earlier songs. I had seen them play at the Mohawk Place in late 2012, six months after the release of Open Your Heart. I had fully expected to come home with a bloody nose from that show, but even by November, they had already become a different band. It’s taken me some time to settle in on the new sound of the band, but what has really struck me is that no matter the genre – these guys have guts, they have soul, they have heart, and they’ve got the brains to get in the studio and make any genre sound good. Tomorrow’s Hits is an album for a road trip through the Midwest. It is windows-down, arm-out-the-window rock. It is fun music blaring from the back stage at your favorite dive bar. I think the boys in The Men have proven that they are going to have fun with their music and truly play for themselves – and I expect several more albums of theirs to come forth in the following years.

Grade: A-






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