


Unlike typical emo rants filled with despondency and arm chair philosophy, the songs are hopeful in nature and deal with the reality that life sucks, but we must move on. Rise Against prefers the reflective approach, pondering rather loudly over man’s inhumanity to his fellow man and war-torn scenes in tracks such as “Behind Closed Doors.” Mcllrath’s lyrics also focus on a more microscopic scale, with introspective songs about past relationships (“Roadside”) and his frustrated search for meaning (“Worth Dying For”). While much of the band’s subject matter is politically and socially conscious in nature, Mcllrath and the boys do not call for anarchy or curse the government. The content of his yowls also sets Mcllrath apart from his colleagues in scream. With earnestness that emo singers can only dream of and the ability to sing and scream on key, Mcllrath’s voice is one of the best in loud music. Lead singer and lyric writer Tim Mcllrath’s ragged vocals provide the glue that holds the firestorm together.

“Drones” takes this mile-a-minute mentality and mixes it with a rolling bassline, pleading vocals, and harmonies to showcase Rise Against at its finest, fusing melody with aggression.

The ode to old school hardcore comes later on with “Bricks”, a loud, biting song with a chorus that matches the brash guitar attack: “With hope in our hearts and bricks in our hands we sing for a change”. Unlike Siren Song‘s opener “State of the Union”, the loudest, angriest, most bare-bones hardcore on the album (perhaps an attempt to show that the band hadn’t softened their attack on a major label), TSATW opens with the less acerbic, and all around more mediocre “Chamber the Cartridge”. The Sufferer and the Witness, Rise Against’s second album for Geffen, picks up where Siren Song left off, with 13 tracks of hard-nosed punk with a focus on melody, crunchy hooks, and shout-along choruses. While such additions may have opened the band to ridicule, in truth the hardcore heart of the songs was still there, only in a more accessible manner. Siren Song of the Counter Culture‘s new addition of poppier guitars, strings, and an acoustic track confirmed for many the fatal prognosis. Just try to stop yourself from moshing to 2020’s metallic-tinged Dark Nights: Death Metal song “Broken Dreams, Inc.”, a riotous call to action for the oppressed to rise up and keep moving forward despite adversity.When the melodic hardcore outfit Rise Against switched from Fat Wreck Chords to the “evil” major label Geffen Records in 2004, cries of “sellout” were uttered by mohawked suburbanites everywhere, even before the album was released. McIlrath’s gravel-coated vocals sound clearer and more melodic on Rise Against’s biggest albums-including the 2008 breakthrough Appeal to Reason, which was co-produced by Descendents mainstay Bill Stevenson-but the band’s messaging is as ferocious and consistent as ever. The corrugated hard-rock hits “Savior” and “Prayer for the Refugee” burst with aggressive energy and hardcore speed, while songs such as “Re-Education (Through Labor)” are pointed political snarls with punk’s social conscience. Graduating to a major label with 2004’s Siren Song of the Counter Culture dulled none of the group’s underground sensibilities. After changing their name to Rise Against, they released the early-2000s albums The Unraveling and Revolutions Per Minute via the venerable punk label Fat Wreck Chords. The band coalesced in 1999 under the name Transistor Revolt, after former 88 Fingers Louie member Joe Principe met punk-scene denizen Tim McIlrath at a Sick Of It All and AFI concert. Although Fall Out Boy receive credit for elevating the reputation of Chicago’s vibrant punk scene, Rise Against deserve just as much shine.
