Music review: Green Day – “Revolution Radio”
The boys are back and ready to start a revolution through the airwaves with a 12-song confessional crafted to raise eyebrows and social awareness concerning life in a modern world.
The outrage and fear that consumed Green DayĢƵ “American Idiot” transformed into frustration and anxiety on “21st Century Breakdown.” Now, “Revolution Radio” completes the trilogy by displaying a sense of maturity and better understanding of the complicated times that surround us.
With guitar-soaked anthems filled with biting lyrics and vivid imagery, the latest effort from the punk trio masterfully follows the rebellious undercurrent entrenched throughout “American Idiot” and “21st Century Breakdown.”
The fiery anthem “Somewhere Now” opens the album with frontman Billie Jo Armstrong announcing, “I’m running late to somewhere now/I don’t want to be/Where the future and promises/Ain’t what it used to be/I never wanted to compromise/Or bargain with my soul/How did a life on the wild side/Ever get so dull?”
The albumĢƵ lead single, “Bang Bang,” focuses on American gun violence and how cable news and social media contribute to providing these shooters with their 15 minutes of fame.
Youthful energy and rebellion are unleashed on “Bouncing Off the Wall” as the track recalls the days of “Dookie” with Armstrong singing, “‘Cause we’re all bloody freaks/And we’ll give you the creeps.”
“Still Breathing” serves as a survivorĢƵ tale and carries an infectious melody that could have easily come from the musical mind of Butch Walker with Armstrong professing, “‘Cause I’m still breathing/’Cause I’m still breathing on my own/My headĢƵ above the rain and roses/Making my way away.”
My favorite track is delivered on “Outlaws.” The sentimental power ballad hits a chord of nostalgia with a message of once a punk rocker, always a punk rocker as Armstrong sings, “Outlaws/When we were forever young/When we were outlaws/We’re outlaws of redemption, baby/Hooligans/We destroyed suburbia/When we were outlaws/The outlaws of forever.”
“Forever Now” is a self-contained mini-rock opera that comes full circle with the opening track by calling for change in the status quo as Armstrong sings, “I wanna start a revolution/I want to hear it on my radio.”
With the same charm of “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life),” the set comes to a gentler close and acceptance with “Ordinary World” and Armstrong confessing, “The days into years roll by/ItĢƵ where that I live until I die/Ordinary world.”
During an interview in the 1960s, Bob Dylan once stated that chaos was a friend of his. Chaos is certainly a stubborn and influential partner to Green Day as well.
Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer. He can be reached at crhodes@heraldstandard.com.