![]() So does this mean all twelve of the tracks are catchy Offspring signature punk rock tunes combined with a little extra emotion than usual? No, actually it doesn’t. The number of joke songs on Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace is a big zero. It is possible, from reading the very meaningful title and looking at that dark cover, that without even hearing Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace, you have already surmised that this is a more serious and deeply emotional record and that it doesn’t contain any silly songs. Now if you think about that title for a minute (ya, its basically stolen from the Foo Fighters) and then look at that album artwork (it actually doesn’t have a skull on it) you can probably guess some things already about this album. Since then, they’ve come out with Splinter, a fair album that sported some good heavier punk songs but was ruined by crappy silly ones, and now, five years later, Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace. It’s hard for me to believe that Americana is already ten years behind them and the pop punk piece of poo Conspiracy of One is a long eight. It has been long enough since The Offspring released a new album. ![]() Review Summary: Probably The Offspring's best effort in ten years, but that's not saying too much.
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