History Books
The Gaslight Anthem’s 2023 LP *History Books* serves as their first since 2014, and the band brings such ferocity to their return, it sounds as if they’re trying to wipe away a near-decade’s worth of cobwebs in a single riff, cymbal crash, and lyric. Somber but not sad, *History Books* recalls the urgency and triumph of the band’s sophomore effort and breakthrough, 2008’s *The \'59 Sound*. Singer Brian Fallon sounds reinvigorated and as tenacious as ever, yet also a bit wiser since the last time he and his band checked in. Opener “Spider Bites” shines with soaring guitar solos and a galloping drum groove. Fallon’s voice is awash in distortion, less desperate but no less passionate than he sounded as a young man 15 years prior to *History Books*. The Jersey-bred band still pays homage to their chief influence Bruce Springsteen on *History Books* (they even recorded a version of the title track with him), but the inspirations are more varied, less indebted to a particular time, place, and Boss. “Autumn” is a blues rock bar sing-along, and “Michigan, 1975” shows a restraint and tension reminiscent of alt-rock anthems that populated radio playlists when The Gaslight Anthem’s band members were still boys. Sort of like Faulkner once said, the past is never dead. It ain’t even the past.
On the Gaslight Anthem's first new album in nine years, the band arrives with a reflective sense of nostalgia.
If being personally asked by Bruce Springsteen to write a duet doesn’t cement The Gaslight Anthem's status as one of the finest purveyors of American
Ed Walton reviews the new album from The Gaslight Anthem! Read the review of 'History Books' here on Distorted Sound!
The Gaslight Anthem's first album in almost ten years, History Books, is a concise ten-track that aims to recapture the sound of their most successful outings.
The Gaslight Anthem - History Books review: My, how the years and our youth pass on