| | Fall Out Boy Take This To Your Grave CD Fall Out Boy Discography of CDs
(52 Customer Reviews)
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Fall Out Boy: Peter Wentz, Andrew Hurley, Patrick Strump, Joseph Trohman. Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison, Wisconsin; Gravity, Chicago, Illinois and Rosebud, Skokie, Illinois. Originally released in 2003 and reissued in '05 (shortly before the band's major label debut), Fall Out Boy's first full-length album, TAKE THIS TO YOUR GRAVE, is a remarkably assured initial outing. One of many acts in the early-2000s emo boom, the Illinois ensemble distinguished itself from the pack with tight musicianship and a keen sense of melody. Rather than halfheartedly attempting to cling to its hardcore roots, like some of its peers, Fall Out Boy is simply out to make catchy, affecting rock here, as witnessed through glorious pop-punk moments such as "Grand Theft Autumn/Where Is Your Boy" and "Saturday." While frontman Patrick Stump's amiable, sensitive-guy vocals are clearly one of the group's selling points, Fall Out Boy also impresses with its inventive guitar work, which even bears metal influences at times (see the Iron Maiden-like lead riffs on "Dead on Arrival"). Although the band would have to wait until FROM UNDER THE CORK TREE for massive success, this album reveals that Fall Out Boy's sound was fully formed years before "Sugar, We're Goin' Down" hit the charts. Fall Out Boy's full-length label debut, Take This to Your Grave is a smart collection of emo-influenced pop-punk tunes. It's long on harmony and the kind of earnest, dual guitar riffing listeners have come to expect from young rockers raised on a diet of hardcore, Punk-O-Rama comps, and MTV. But Fall Out Boy really necks ahead of the pack behind the enormous voice of dreamboat-in-training lead singer Patrick Stump and lyrical content that merges musings on love and youth with healthy amounts of cutting cynicism, savvy popular culture touchstones, and cheeky phraseology. Though it was issued by Less Than Jake drummer Vinnie Fiorello's Fueled By Ramen imprint, a hefty advance from Island allowed Fall Out Boy to record Grave at Butch Vig's Smart Studios compound in Madison, WI, and employ the skills of producer Sean O'Keefe, who'd handled the boards for units like Lucky Boys Confusion and Motion City Soundtrack. Of course, Island will be looking for a substantial return on investment from Fall Out Boy. But before the band follows in the footsteps of Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard Confessional -- which it deserves to and will -- listeners can enjoy Take This to Your Grave's undeniable mixture of exuberance and romantic hardcore. Like a high-school dreamer's homeroom notebook, Grave's margins are littered with impossibly clever turns of phrase. A preliminary scan of the record's song titles is enough to prove this. From the double-time hardcore of "Reinventing the Wheel to Run Myself Over" to the shifting dynamics of "Homesick at Space Camp" (which was seemingly engineered by NASA to incite a crowd singalong), Fall Out Boy renders each song with a different mix of talents. Every time you think you've heard it all before, the band kills with another couplet. "I know I'm not your favorite record/The songs you grow to like never stick at first," Stump croons in "Dead on Arrival." Later, "Calm Before the Storm" dissects a relationship with an almost intellectual mix of casual, MTV-generation reference-making and a dose of self-analysis that suggests sadcore anti-hero Bill Callahan. After name-checking a throwaway Top 40 ditty, Stump addresses his ex: "What you do on your own time's just fine/My imagination's much worse." While Grave's 12 tracks run on the long-range external tanks of emotion that every teenager refuels with each miniature passing period drama, they're also professionally executed packets of melody. While the exposed nerve of hardcore is apparent throughout, Stump, bassist Peter Wentz, drummer Andrew Hurley, and guitarist Joseph Trohman are making music for a generation that appreciates a good hook, and isn't necessarily concerned where it comes from. Alte Take This To Your Grave Music Fall Out Boy Take This To Your Grave Songs Take This To Your Grave Music Take This To Your Grave Music Review Average Rating: (4.3 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Great CD for any collection This is an amazing CD for your collection. If you like Fall Out Boy you'll love this album. Submitted by jwoolley23 (Portland, Or, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
good but it didnt move me I was really hyped when i ordered this cd. I had a feeling i was gonna love it but that didnt happen. its an ok album, nothing great but enjoyable. I dont hate it but i dont love it. Submitted by wilfredosanchez18 (Moca, Puerto Rico)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
AwEsOmE This CD is really good! I wasn't expecting it to be as poppy as it was, but its still really good! It actually made me want to listen to pop punk again! Submitted by looweesa (Matthews, NC)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Sweet Album I really like this album, not as much as i like from under the cork tree but i think it's just as good as infinity on high. Submitted by whipper2 (Tootgarook, VIC, AUS) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
love this cd better than their previous cd but not as good as from under the cork tree or infinity on high. but it is worth getting. Submitted by kathy.zhang.12 (Ottawa, Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Buy Take This To Your Grave CD Purchase Take This To Your Grave CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Take This To Your Grave
$6.39 The Corrs: Jim Corr (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Sharon Corr (vocals, violin); Andrea Corr (vocals, tin whistle); Caroline Corr (vocals, drums, bodhran, percussion). Recorded at Ardmore Studios in Dublin, Ireland in January 2002. You knew the Corrs had made it when they played the final JFK Awards ceremony of the Clinton administration. Playing it would have been achievement enough, but their status as a happening thing was cemented at the end of the ceremony, during the encores, when everybody was taking their final bows. Bill moseyed up over to Andrea, put his arm around her, and when she was looking away, sized her up -- at precisely the same moment Chuck Berry was checking her out. If that doesn't ...
| | Brand New Deja Entendu CD (2003)
Take This To Your Grave
$9.99 Brand New: Jesse Lacey (vocals); Vin Accardi (guitar); Garrett Tierney (bass); Brian Lane (drums). Recorded at Reflection Sound Studios, Charlotte, North Carolina. Audio Mixers: Mike Sapone; Steve Haigler. Recording information: Reflection Sound Studios, Charlotte, NC; Sapone Productions. As the popularity of emo and punk-pop plateaued, many bands had a lot to prove to stay in the game. As of 2003, Brand New had sidestepped any notion that they'd be stuck in the prototypical mold found on Your Favorite Weapon. Unlike their debut, Deja Entendu isn't all about bitter breakups and doesn't fall into ...
| | Yellowcard Ocean Avenue CD (2003) Enhanced CD
Take This To Your Grave
$10.65 Capitol Records Debut From Young So.Calif.Quintet.
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Yellowcard: Ryan Key (vocals, guitar, bass); Sean Mackin (vocals, violin); Benjamin Harper (guitar); Longineu Parsons (drums). Additional personnel: Alieka Wijnvelat (vocals); Rodney Wirtz (viola); Christine Choi (cello); Peter Mosely (piano, bass). Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, California between ...
| | Fall Out Boy My Heart Will Always Be The B-Side To My Tongue CD (2004) Extended Play
Take This To Your Grave
$11.19 Fall Out Boy: Pete Wentz, Patrick Stump, Joe Trohman, Andrew Hurley. Since the release of Take This to Your Grave in May 2003, Fall Out Boy seemed splashed across the concert listing pages of every fishwrap from Bakersfield to Buffalo. Still, they found time to record this tide-me-over acoustic EP. "Grand Theft Autumn/Where Is Your Boy" gets the unplugged treatment, and though their titles are ultimately more memorable than the new songs themselves, "It's Not a Side Effect of the Cocaine, I Am Thinking It Must Be Love," and particularly "Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner" are filled with the rousing vocals and emo-inflected sonic heartbreak that made Grave so memorable. The band's rhythm section is jobless for My ...
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Take This To Your Grave
$9.95 My Chemical Romance: Gerard Way (vocals); Frank Iero, Ray Toro (guitar); Mikey Way (bass guitar); Matt Pelissier (drums). My Chemical Romance's 2002 debut was a particularly strident entry in that shifty genre of bands tortuously slamming together ...
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