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Put Up or Shut Up

Put Up or Shut Up in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $9.99
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Only 30 seconds into
Put Up or Shut Up
and it's pretty apparent that this has all been heard before -- more times than one could possibly count.
All Time Low
plays unabashedly earnest and summery
pop
-
punk
like
the Starting Line
used to play before they took a stab at "maturity" and experienced severe growing pains. Mostly featuring new recordings of older material from 2005's out of print
The Party Scene
, the band's
Hopeless
debut is bright, energetic, catchy, and practically pleading to be repeatedly blared from the car stereo over that last high-school summer before senior year starts. Their music reeks of youthful exuberance and fleeting innocence (though all of this should come as no surprise since the guys signed on with
during the final months of their senior year). So while there's nothing really new or innovative among the EP's seven songs, it's at least refreshing that
make no stabs at pretending to be something they're not. Sure, they may sound like honor students from the
Green Day
and
blink-182
school of music, but at least they cite the aforementioned bands as influences instead of reaching for some obscure point of reference. And, well, that's gotta be worth at least a few points in their favor. Like the rambunctious younger brothers of
Cartel
still figuring things out,
still have plenty of room to grow sonically and lyrically past the sugary-sweet hallmarks of most of their peers. But even so, there's already plenty here to satisfy scores of undersaturated ears. ~ Corey Apar
Put Up or Shut Up
and it's pretty apparent that this has all been heard before -- more times than one could possibly count.
All Time Low
plays unabashedly earnest and summery
pop
-
punk
like
the Starting Line
used to play before they took a stab at "maturity" and experienced severe growing pains. Mostly featuring new recordings of older material from 2005's out of print
The Party Scene
, the band's
Hopeless
debut is bright, energetic, catchy, and practically pleading to be repeatedly blared from the car stereo over that last high-school summer before senior year starts. Their music reeks of youthful exuberance and fleeting innocence (though all of this should come as no surprise since the guys signed on with
during the final months of their senior year). So while there's nothing really new or innovative among the EP's seven songs, it's at least refreshing that
make no stabs at pretending to be something they're not. Sure, they may sound like honor students from the
Green Day
and
blink-182
school of music, but at least they cite the aforementioned bands as influences instead of reaching for some obscure point of reference. And, well, that's gotta be worth at least a few points in their favor. Like the rambunctious younger brothers of
Cartel
still figuring things out,
still have plenty of room to grow sonically and lyrically past the sugary-sweet hallmarks of most of their peers. But even so, there's already plenty here to satisfy scores of undersaturated ears. ~ Corey Apar