Half Divorced
Pissed Jeans has never been a band that goes halfwayātheyāre known for their feral vocals, biting lyrics, buzzsaw guitars, and unhinged live shows, and their sixth album, Half-Divorced is no exception. These songs skewer the tension between youthful optimism and the sobering realities of adulthood, and when viewed through frontman Matt Korvetteās scowl, everything takes on a level of violent absurdity.
Pissed Jeansā notorious acerbic sense of humor remains sharper than ever as they dismember some of the joys that contemporary adult life has to offer, from helicopter parents to stolen catalytic converters to being $62,000 in debt. On āSeatbelt Alarm Silencer,ā Korvette growls, āCall it a death drive but that aināt fair / Drive implies Iām headed somewhere.ā
So where does a band like Pissed Jeans go after nearly twenty years of making music, after becoming fathers, after marriages, and after divorces? Existence has festered to a boiling point. Korvette said, āHalf-Divorced has an aggression within it, in terms of saying, I donāt want this reality. Thereās a power in being able to say, I realize you want me to pay attention to these things, but Iām telling you that they donāt matter. Iām already looking elsewhere.ā
Even within the brutality that Korvette conjures on songs like āKilling All the Wrong Peopleā (āIf violence is now their form of play / Letās aim em towards those who made em that wayā), the energy on some of these songs is inadvertently, well, fun. Listening to this album will give even the most jaded nine-to-fiver the sense that unrestrained freedom is still possible. And who else is going to rhyme ācolonizerā with āmoisturizerā anyway?Ā
Korvette, Brad Fry (guitar), Randy Huth (bass) and Sean McGuinness (drums) werenāt in any rush to finish Half-Divorced, which was recorded by Don Godwin at Tonal Park in Takoma Park, Maryland. āWeāre not the kind of band that bangs out a new record every two years,ā Korvette said. āPissed Jeans is truly like an art project for us, which is what makes it so fun.ā This lack of restraint rages within the songs that unexpectedly veer into classic hardcore punk territoryāoften coming in at under two minutes long and erupting like the ābutane tank explosionā Korvette sings about in āJunktime.āĀ Ā
This distilled energy makes Half-Divorced sound menacing and dangerous. Korvette said, āWe realized weād never really fucked with pop punk, and we thought, this is something that isnāt going to be immediately recognizable as cool. So letās challenge ourselves to make it feel cool to us.āĀ
Thereās also a Pink Lincolns cover, āMonsters,ā on which Korvette sings, āPeople are more hideous than monsters.ā And in the last song, āMoving On,ā Korvette sneers, āCheesing into my cameraphone / Pretending that Iām not alone / Lifeās the first thing that we all postpone.ā One gets the sense that Pissed Jeans refuses to āpostponeā life in quite the same wayālife, like art, is something that happens now, not later.Ā
The word ādivorceā falls in line with the moments of humiliation and shame that are held up for all to see on this album. Korvette said, āIf you say something enough or if you just allow it to exist publicly, then it loses its evil monster-in-the-closet thing.ā There is clarity to be found within both the light and the dark, in both the marriage and the divorce. As the chorus of the last song calls out: āIām moving on, Iām moving on, Iām moving on.āĀ
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Description
Pissed Jeans has never been a band that goes halfwayātheyāre known for their feral vocals, biting lyrics, buzzsaw guitars, and unhinged live shows, and their sixth album, Half-Divorced is no exception. These songs skewer the tension between youthful optimism and the sobering realities of adulthood, and when viewed through frontman Matt Korvetteās scowl, everything takes on a level of violent absurdity.
Pissed Jeansā notorious acerbic sense of humor remains sharper than ever as they dismember some of the joys that contemporary adult life has to offer, from helicopter parents to stolen catalytic converters to being $62,000 in debt. On āSeatbelt Alarm Silencer,ā Korvette growls, āCall it a death drive but that aināt fair / Drive implies Iām headed somewhere.ā
So where does a band like Pissed Jeans go after nearly twenty years of making music, after becoming fathers, after marriages, and after divorces? Existence has festered to a boiling point. Korvette said, āHalf-Divorced has an aggression within it, in terms of saying, I donāt want this reality. Thereās a power in being able to say, I realize you want me to pay attention to these things, but Iām telling you that they donāt matter. Iām already looking elsewhere.ā
Even within the brutality that Korvette conjures on songs like āKilling All the Wrong Peopleā (āIf violence is now their form of play / Letās aim em towards those who made em that wayā), the energy on some of these songs is inadvertently, well, fun. Listening to this album will give even the most jaded nine-to-fiver the sense that unrestrained freedom is still possible. And who else is going to rhyme ācolonizerā with āmoisturizerā anyway?Ā
Korvette, Brad Fry (guitar), Randy Huth (bass) and Sean McGuinness (drums) werenāt in any rush to finish Half-Divorced, which was recorded by Don Godwin at Tonal Park in Takoma Park, Maryland. āWeāre not the kind of band that bangs out a new record every two years,ā Korvette said. āPissed Jeans is truly like an art project for us, which is what makes it so fun.ā This lack of restraint rages within the songs that unexpectedly veer into classic hardcore punk territoryāoften coming in at under two minutes long and erupting like the ābutane tank explosionā Korvette sings about in āJunktime.āĀ Ā
This distilled energy makes Half-Divorced sound menacing and dangerous. Korvette said, āWe realized weād never really fucked with pop punk, and we thought, this is something that isnāt going to be immediately recognizable as cool. So letās challenge ourselves to make it feel cool to us.āĀ
Thereās also a Pink Lincolns cover, āMonsters,ā on which Korvette sings, āPeople are more hideous than monsters.ā And in the last song, āMoving On,ā Korvette sneers, āCheesing into my cameraphone / Pretending that Iām not alone / Lifeās the first thing that we all postpone.ā One gets the sense that Pissed Jeans refuses to āpostponeā life in quite the same wayālife, like art, is something that happens now, not later.Ā
The word ādivorceā falls in line with the moments of humiliation and shame that are held up for all to see on this album. Korvette said, āIf you say something enough or if you just allow it to exist publicly, then it loses its evil monster-in-the-closet thing.ā There is clarity to be found within both the light and the dark, in both the marriage and the divorce. As the chorus of the last song calls out: āIām moving on, Iām moving on, Iām moving on.āĀ













