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Rolling Stone Reviews 'Revolution Radio'

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Fanpup says...
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called Green день Older, Wiser, Mad as Hell in 'Revolution Radio' - Rolling Stone
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
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Green Day's first album in four years is vibrant punk rock, uncluttered by outsize grandiosity or conceptual overthink. "Revolution Radio" sets the tone with its Clash-like police-siren guitar, Tré Cool's combustible drum tumult and Billie Joe Armstrong snarling about cherry bombs and gasoline as if he's looking around his garage for stuff that might set the world on fire. And so he does: The explosive American-angst autopsy "Bang Bang" hits as hard as anything on their Nineties classics
Dookie and Kerplunk; when Armstrong sings, "I want to start a rager," it doesn't matter that he's appropriating the voice of a power-mad school shooter. You'll wanna rage right along.
But Revolution Radio isn't just hot nostalgia. It reflects decades of accrued emotional and musical wisdom. "Somewhere Now" is a call for personal and political clarity with a ringing R.E.M. brightness, and "Outlaws" is like an anarcho-thrash Seventies soft-rock ballad. Armstrong's lyrics are colored by his struggles with addiction and fears about our Trump-y future. "If this is what you call the good life/I want a better way to die," he rants over the contusive mosh-pit bounce of "Forever Now," before demanding a revolution on his radio as the song lifts toward Who-huge triumph. It's a noise built to push him through darkness and into the next scary dawn. 
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