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- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
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MojoDec 17, 2012Plenty of nightmare visions of Skid Row LA, but really no fun at all. [Jan 2013, p.93]
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MagnetDec 4, 2012The band has ripped elements from early L.A. hardcore, '90s powerviolence and screamo, and it wields this arsenal of influences to deliver big, sharp hooks. [No. 93, p.59]
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Q MagazineNov 21, 2012Trash Talk's speed punk is the musical equivalent of the third can of Red Bull: a great idea at the time, but may well produce a headache after. [Dec 2012, p.113]
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Kerrang!Nov 7, 2012This remains a feral ball of aggression and loathing. And frankly, we wouldn't want it any other way. [13 Oct 2012, p.54]
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Nov 6, 2012Trash Talk continue with not reinventing the wheel, and they do so effectively--it grinds, it pummels, and it's tailor-made for another generation of youth to get their circle pit on.
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Oct 26, 2012Trash Talk are still far from a pop group, and the album features some highly destructive moments in its 22-minute span – but unfortunately, 119 features too many weak spots of lukewarm punk that suggest the group is beginning to slip away from the fully realized and perfectly balanced sound the group was just starting to master.
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Oct 19, 2012An album that is, at best, a dilution of the real experience it's trying to capture.
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Oct 15, 2012While the group's penchant for humid power-dirges threatens to sink 119 in its middle, they're unbeatable--but only when they skip the accoutrements and just bang away at high speed.
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Oct 11, 2012Rather than stampeding recklessly forward on the heels of cataclysmic frontman Lee Spielman, Trash Talk have re-directed their energy into mountainous, pile-driving riffs that hit with a lowdown, deliberate force.
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Oct 11, 2012Thankfully, concessions aren't made at many other places on the album, and that may be why the thing works so well.
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Oct 10, 2012Its suicidal lyrics and aggressive guitar riffs won't disappoint current fans and will more than likely win over a bunch of kids from the Odd Future side.
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Oct 9, 2012About seven tracks in, 119 settles into a series of mid-tempo jogs that fail to really go anywhere.
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Oct 9, 2012119 is more concerned about power flexing than it is being simple, fast, direct, and catchy (and there are way less 30-second spurts than before); it has a hefty presence of East Coast ferocity, and Spielman's signature chokehold commands the band's socio-political magnitude more than ever.
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Oct 8, 2012Articulate lyrics, brutality, aggression and hot, thick-and-fast sequences that could turn Benjamin Francis Leftwich into a spliff-stealing thug characterise 119.
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Oct 8, 2012Lee Spielman, the charismatic and intense frontman, is far more legible a singer here than he's ever been. That lucidity is in service of some of his most pointed lyrics.
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Oct 8, 2012For the majority of the other songs Lee Spielman runs the show, screeching street-sick lyrics about the crime-ridden area surrounding their Sacramento practice space.
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Oct 8, 2012The most obvious progressions are the band's clearer song structures and Lee Spielman's vocals.
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Oct 8, 2012It's sometimes a difficult listen, there's a lack of lucidity and guile that at times leaves the less striking tracks to come across rather samey.