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The Offspring

Splinter

  • AMG Review of Splinter

    Amg
    Johnny Loftus
    All Music Guide

    It's more mixing of stylized punk revival and hybridism with left-field musical experimentation and in-the-now pop culture lyrical references on Splinter, the Offspring's seventh full-length. "Never Gonna Find Me," "Long Way Home," and "Lightning Rod" each bristle with overdriven guitars and Dexter Holland's high-pitched bleating; they're somewhat workmanlike, but still roil with that precision fury particular to a veteran band. At the same time, Holland, guitarist Noodles, and bassist Greg Kriesel can't resist returning to the towel-slapping trash humor and mean-spirited loathing that typified past tracks like "Pretty Fly (For a White Guy)" and "Self Esteem." Lead single "Hit That" talks up baby daddies over a bopping bassline and keyboard right out of a Bloodhound Gang track, while "Spare Me the Details" subverts its lighthearted acoustic strum with foul-mouthed (on the clean version, anyway) attacks on a philandering girlfriend ("I'm not the one who acted like a ho"). "Da Hui" overdrives surf ock while paying homage to hardcore Hawaiian board riders, and "When You're in Prison" ends Splinter with sage advice about protecting your dignity in the clink. Longtime fans will be more than happy with Splinter, which crams every last piece of the Offspring puzzle -- slickly produced ock racket, hints of anti-establishment rabble-rousing, and reams of relationship and strip mall culture gaggery -- into its brief half-hour run time.

Sometimes it's simple
over 2 years ago

There are songs that I like just because a simple sound or happy instrument makes me stop and listen. Never gave Offspring's Splinter album a listen until I heard Hit That. The funky keyboard/synthesizer had me hooked.Same thing with the xylophone in Violent Femmes' Gone Daddy Gone and the toy piano in Ben Lee's Catch My Disease. There are just days when it doesn't take much to make me happy. W...

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Sometimes it's simple
over 2 years ago

There are songs that I like just because a simple sound or happy instrument makes me stop and listen. Never gave Offspring's Splinter album a listen until I heard Hit That. The funky keyboard/synthesizer had me hooked.Same thing with the xylophone in Violent Femmes' Gone Daddy Gone and the toy piano in Ben Lee's Catch My Disease. There are just days when it doesn't take much to make me happy. W...

More >

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