Green Day: Shenanigans

When looking to commit to the musical World again. You need to assert a comeback with groundbreaking results. B side albums are acclaimed to be mixed with a desperation factor, songs left to wither away minus notability. But a Berkley trio proved that B side contribution's can work.

Shenanigans offers a low key sound that forcefully flutters through its up-tempo counterparts. Releasing a relaxing vibe that manipulates the Green Day norm, killing off a high-pitched contrast. The album is cagy and conflict ridden. Exploiting an older style with songs that would fit perfectly into 60's music. Breaking the circle of Punk, Green Day strayed away from their prior stand-point.

Shenanigans bleeds sincerity and urgency that is rightfully cordinated. Crafted together with a desire and fluency that can be misjudged. Commencing with a spicy coated track named 'Suffocate'. Shenanigans lifts the lid on a new direction that Green Day were following. Shenanigans was empathic, a process for a band to recuperate. A fundamentel leap forward to bigger and better things. Uplifting the standard of B side contributions, Green Day really bit the bullet. Shenanigans has no emulation to past records, its idiotic, it's strange its overly immature. Green Day grinded down their overlapped point of growing up and suffocated that statement with bratty infectious musical values.

Perfecting such an album really wasn't high on the agenda; it was an outspoken judgement of not wanting to grow scared of growing old. Shenanigans offered a new intro for Green Day's comeback. Not staged or rehearsed, Green Day brought out songs that were never quite ready for inclusion on Dookie etc. Songs overshadowed by an endless flock of faithful indulging themselves in Green Day's finest release.

Shenanigans was an urgent, fast-paced collection of songs that redeemed Green Day's prior style. Letting out ritual's that Green Day swore by. Punk was coming out of retirement. So the album excelled, flourishing like a flower planted in the warning era. Shenaigans may not take its self seriously but nor does the band that produced it.

Mark McConville
Posted on May 18th, 2008 at 10:56am

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