
Punk rock as meat-and-potatoes analogy.
The Ducky Boys - The War Back HomePosted by Editorial Intern on 01-Jun-06 @ 01:34 PM
[4/5] With the Ducky Boys, that age-old old axiom "What you see is what you get" pretty much holds true. No gimmicks. No posturing. All these Boston dudes are about is bringing the rock. Armed with their working-class "everyman" punk rock à la Hudson Falcons and the Loved Ones, the Ducky Boys pepper their latest disc, The War Back Home, with songs that span the gamut from cryin'-in-my-beer crooners ("This Time Last Year") to all-out wild rockers ("Kids," "Contrived And Treacherous"). Lyrically, the band truly excel when dealing with topics of a more sociopolitical nature, as on "Corporate America" and "Bombs Away." Throughout the superb "Celebrate," frontman Mark Lind paints poignant tableaus of various people dealing with the effects of war, the uneven distribution of wealth, and his own acceptance of having to bid farewell to his "hopes and dreams."
(SAILOR'S GRAVE) Janelle Jones
Official Website: http://www.sailorsgraverecords.com
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Also in this issue:
- Damone
- Jonas Brother
- Murder By Death
- The Raconteurs
- Radio 4
- Serena Maneesh
- The Walkmen
- Whirlwind Heat
- Against All Authority
- Be Your Own PET
- The Classic Crime
- Controlling The Famous
- Moneen
- New Mexican Disaster Squad
- Ryan's Hope
- Alias & Tarsier
- Beans Feat. William Parker And Hamid Drake
- Dub Trio
- Espers
- Eugene Mirman
- MSTRKRFT
- Scott Walker
- Don Caballero
- Kalas
- Lair Of The Minotaur
- The Melvins
- Ocrilim
- Path Of Resistance
- Russian Circles
- The Fiery Furnaces
- The Forecast
- Gomez
- Micah P. Hinson
- John Ralston
- The Stills
- Twilight Singers
- Underoath
- Halifax
- Angels & Airwaves
- Head Automatica
- The Black Heart Procession
- Matmos
- Tilly And The Wall
- Peeping Tom
- Tool
- Other sections...





























[4/5] With the Ducky Boys, that age-old old axiom "What you see is what you get" pretty much holds true. No gimmicks. No posturing. All these Boston dudes are about is bringing the rock. Armed with their working-class "everyman" punk rock à la Hudson Falcons and the Loved Ones, the Ducky Boys pepper their latest disc, The War Back Home, with songs that span the gamut from cryin'-in-my-beer crooners ("This Time Last Year") to all-out wild rockers ("Kids," "Contrived And Treacherous"). Lyrically, the band truly excel when dealing with topics of a more sociopolitical nature, as on "Corporate America" and "Bombs Away." Throughout the superb "Celebrate," frontman Mark Lind paints poignant tableaus of various people dealing with the effects of war, the uneven distribution of wealth, and his own acceptance of having to bid farewell to his "hopes and dreams."
(SAILOR'S GRAVE) Janelle Jones
Official Website: 
