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The Like Young - So Serious

so serious cover art

Artist: The Like Young
Title: So Serious
Catalog#: Parasol-CD-093
Price: $12.00 buy

Tracks on this CD:
Out To Get Me

You're No Cheat

Tighten My Tie
Worry A Lot
Sabine & Me
Routines
Degenerate
Heard Your Health
Don't Know When To Stop
Sharp Or Messy
Be A Sinner
Really Up To You
Rings by Absinthe Blind (Mud Records)




The Like Young is comprised of two people: Amanda and Joe Ziemba. Married in 2002 and playing in bands together since 1997 (Wolfie/Busytoby), they were at a standstill after a year of musical confusion; tired of taking things so seriously, overanalyzing every “career” move, and longing for the days when making music just felt good… It was time to shed the obsessive tendencies and embrace the wonderful feeling of heading into the basement together and rocking out.

So that's what they did. No longer scared of saying what was on their minds and feeling unfettered by the expectations of their previous musical output, The Like Young took shape in Chicago during the spring of 2002.

In 2003, Parasol released the band’s acclaimed debut, “Art Contest.” New City Chicago voted The Like Young's "Art Contest" the Best New Rock Album by a Chicago Artist and the band piled up the positive reviews like, “Infectious, stellar, and juicy, this will make my 2003 Top Ten list, hands down. Get your Big Muff and your wedding china, folks. Holy shit." from Venus and, “Biting lyrically, inviting sonically — now that's a marriage made in heaven." in The Los Angeles Times.
Cut to 2004. One year after the release of debut album “Art Contest,” several national tours (including an opening stint for Mates Of State), and two day jobs later, The Like Young have unleashed "So Serious." Building on the base of their debut and kicking it up ten notches, the Ziembas rip through 12 songs in 24 minutes, producing their most focused and confident group of songs yet. With Barry Phipps (Cocktails) back at the boards and some lyrical brimstone on the mic, The Like Young loses the suits and lets it all hang out. 50s-80s-00s pop-rock-punk.




And the critics swoon:

from Pitchfork Media:

Here are some facts: The Like Young have only two members. One is female. The other is male. The man, Joe Ziemba, plays guitar and writes most of the songs. The woman, Amanda Ziemba, plays drums and sometimes sings. Sharing a distinctive surname, they could either be siblings or spouses. In fact, they're the latter. They've shared a bill with The Von Bondies.

On paper, The Like Young resemble another popular, co-ed, two-member band of siblings/spouses with connections to Jason Stollsteimer's Motor City group, but the similarities end there. While most of today's two-member bands, like The Black Keys and Mr. Airplane Man, seem to gravitate toward blues-based rock and, like sonneteers, find freedom in the limitations of their line-ups, the Ziembas never sound like just two people: they play tight power-pop as if they had an extra person or two. In fact, they sound closer to The Spinanes than to The White Stripes, and closer still to twice-their-size groups like Weezer or Fountains of Wayne.

Tighter and more dynamic than last year's Art Contest, The Like Young's second album, So Serious, is dense with sound and noise, and not just because Joe overlays some songs with spacey keyboards and thumping bass. In part thanks to former Coctail Barry Phipps' snappy production, Joe's guitar makes a really loud noise, and Amanda's drums crack like whips while she does double and triple duty as her husband's backup singer and verbal sparring partner.

None of which is to suggest that The Like Young aren't, in their own way, as elemental as any of the blues twos. Clocking in at a mere 24 minutes, So Serious is all a-jumble with catchy guitars, hooky choruses, tight drumming, and backup vocals that never run out of new ways to sing ooh and aah. However, The Like Young move from one idea to the next so quickly and frenetically that the catchiest parts are short-lived and rarely repeated more than once. "Sabine & Me" concludes with a propulsive start/stop jam that abruptly ends as soon as it reaches its momentum; the song's over in less than a minute and a half.

Nothing on the album sounds half-baked or underdeveloped, but there's more going on in the songs' brevity than a simple leave-'em-wanting-more aesthetic. It takes several listens to grasp the guiding logic on So Serious, not just in how the songs progress but also in how the lyrics describe situations in language that sounds coded and private. "Big ape, why don't you sue them?" Joe sings on "Routines". "Big ape, I'm giving up and laughing." On "Sharp or Messy", he observes, "When my baby head was soft, thoughts like this were never thought," without clarifying what he's thinking.

The opacity of these lyrics is telling. In the end, So Serious reveals itself generally and implicitly: These songs form a dialogue between a couple who share not just a household but a band. The specifics, however, are between Joe and Amanda. Fortunately, they create and sustain a flurry of restless, catchy pop energy that keeps listeners from feeling either incidental or voyeuristic and that gives them something to sing along with.



from New City Chicago:

Raw Material
Young,with heart
by Dave Chamberlain

The Like Young write and play the best straightforward rock `n' roll songs you've ever heard.

Husband-and-wife duo Amanda and Joe Ziemba have a knack for making the simplest of songs fly off a record or off a stage. Comparisons are there to be made if necessary: a harvest of The Beatles from pre-1965, the sweetest parts of The Ramones and The Jam, and if you listen hard enough, even just a tincture of Nirvana. But the comparisons are moot--The Like Young sound like The Like Young, two musicians whose songs sound like they're being played by a quartet. And those songs: simple but aggressive, the latter trait smoothed out by dime-turning hook after hook. Songs both sweet and bitter, without a hint of bubblegum's sugary aftertaste.

With the release of The Like Young's second full-length record on Parasol Records, "So Serious," Joe (guitar, bass, vocals) and Amanda (drums, vocals) didn't go back and scrap the idea and strength of their debut from 2002, "Art Contest." But it's not a carbon copy either. "Sonically, yeah it's similar," explains Joe. "But I think `So Serious' is more of a distillation, more of a focused effort of what we were going for originally. `Art Contest' was kind of like a baby step, we wanted to test the waters. But once we established that we were heading in the right direction, `So Serious' brought it even more into focus. I mean, they are similar albums. But for me, lyric-wise and from a focus standpoint, it's way beyond the first one."

It's fitting that he mentions lyrics. On "Art Contest" The Like Young's lyrics (Joe does most of the singing on both, but Amanda's backing vocals and occasional lead are ever-present) were the bitter side of the songs, with vague and sometimes obscured references to everything from mean people to money. Lyrics were clever, but clouded enough to force you to look hard to discover just how clever they were. That's not really changed on "So Serious," but the obliqueness renders a two-way picture: are Joe and Amanda really, umm, serious about the veiled meanings, or are they pulling our collective leg? Certain ideas are clear: Joe clearly hates his job on "Out to Get Me," which ends with Amanda pining, "six is way too early." But other ideas are less clear, and it's possible to read lyrical bickering between a married couple throughout the record.

"[The record] is pretty much all about anger and anxiety, and things that happened in the year between our records," says Joe, shedding some light into the lyrical gray areas. "It has nothing to do with our relationship. Or rather, if it does have to do with our relationship, it's about me personally. Most of it deals with the job I was at, and failed friendships, and other things that made me angry over the year."

On stage, however, the specifics of the lyrics take a backseat to the pair's performance presence: fun, but intense and, in every way, pure rock `n' roll. Both qualities are tangible, but the fact that Joe and Amanda are having fun stands out as more important; not having fun was part of the reason that the two split from their former band, Wolfie. "What The Like Young is now," explains Joe, "what we've grown into, is definitely the best."

And what exactly have they grown into? Joe answers, "We've just become very focused, and very conscious of each other and very passionate as a band. We're not frantic, we're not scared to say what's on our mind in our songs, or afraid to rock out. We are who we are now, and we feel--for the first time--a comfort level of who we are now, something that's never been there before. It's a matter of growing up too, and realizing that we're comfortable enough to move forward."

Touring as The Like Young has, no doubt, contributed to the comfort level. The two toured the States for a little more than three months last year, including a month-long stint with Mates of State. They have an inherent advantage in dealing with the physical and mental vagaries of touring since they're married. That could work as either an incredible bonus, or pure torture. According to Joe, it's nothing but the former.

"Being on tour together is pretty much incredible," he says. "The only drawback is like, the first tour when we went out for two months, there were some times when it's horrible because no one knows who we are, and we had no money. We had to cut [the tour] short because we ran out of money. But other than that, being together and traveling together, it's amazing. Half the time, it's just like a huge vacation, you know, and being able to play every night is just an added bonus."



from the Chicago Reader:

A couple years on the road has tightened up the crunchy pop attack of this local husband-and-wife duo. On their brand-new second album, So Serious, guitarist Joe and drummer Amanda Ziemba manage to sound bigger (and louder) than two people... without sacrificing concision - the 12 fully formed songs on the new disc run their course in just 24 minutes. The group has nailed the mix of cheeky, joyous guitar huzzah and hooky power pop that first put Weezer on the map, but there's a muscularity in Joe's raspy singing that's worlds away from Rivers Cuomo's cardigan-clad self-consciousness.


from Delusions Of Adequacy:

They’re already back for round two, and they’re better than ever. The explosive album opener, "Out to Get Me," shows a band that has grown both musically and lyrically. "You’re No Cheat" is no less tight and concise, and things get down right aggro when Joe Ziemba screams "You’re taking all our money." "Tighten My Tie" sounds like the Like Young still seem intent on out-Weezering Weezer "Just stop it / try silence / it sounds easy, but I wish it was"(Pinkerton era, naturally). When Amanda Ziemba’s vocals kick in, it’s near perfection.

Trying to explain what makes this album so exciting and refreshing is hard, but a large part of it’s charm lays in the fact that there is no rock posturing going on, no use of the "now" sound saturating every newer bands latest releases. Something about the Like Young just seems honest. Stripped down to just guitar and drums, the songs themselves have to be good. There’s no hiding behind distracting keys and gratuitous guitar solos. And the songs found on So Serious more than meet the requirements for what makes a song, well, good: insanely catchy melodies ("Routines"), sweet guitar riffs ("Degenerate"), and enough healthy angst to make the listener nostalgic for junior high ("Sharp or Messy").

That said, for all the sugary pop the Like Young is capable of creating, So Serious is markedly darker than the band's last full-length, Art Contest. It’s in the lyrics: "No closing eyes / they’re out to get me / has a minute passed? / some tiny spit here / I wish I wasn’t here." Yeah, it’s even in the title. These former Wolfie members mean business. The result is an edgier version of an already superb band, one that manages to be consistent creatively, and deserves a wider audience.



from Mundane Sounds:

Normally, it's not a good thing if a band's newest record is so close in style to its previous record that all you would have to do to review it is simply change the album title in the older review. One-trick ponyism is not really a good thing, especially if the record sounds identical to the album that preceded it. I mean, a band's gotta grow to get better. Who wants to listen to the same record again? If you're in a band, why would you want to make the exact same record again? Sticking with the formula is just boring.

That's most definitely not the case with The Like Young's newest record, So Serious. Yes, it sounds exactly like Art Contest, their kick-ass debut. Yes, Joe and Amanda still are making wonderful Weezer/Rentals-style pop punk rock, and they're still doing it better than you are. Yes, it doesn't seem like the band's really made an attempt at artistic growth. Yes, they have a sound that's instantly summertime on first listen. So why should you run out and buy this record?

Because it's so damn good, that's why.

Look, people. Summer's officially in full effect. Today is June 1st, so now it's time to get your summer fun on, and like Weezer's classic album, So Serious is never so serious as to be unpleasant. This is one of the best summertime records you'll hear all year. The music is poppy, upbeat, and just so darn FUN, you'll immediately want to put it in your car stereo and turn up the volume full blast. Considering the fact that Joe and Amanda got out and played a bunch of live shows, it's no real surprise that So Serious' sound has grown into a red-hot fireball of pop-punk energy, made by two kids who are hyped up on the mere excitement of rocking out. Every song on this album is a keeper, but I've gravitated to "Sabine & Me" as the constant hit-repeat hit.

To be fair, I've also noticed that they've slowed down the tempo in a few places--such as on the great "Routines" and "Don't Know When To Stop"--but I don't want to scare you off , because they've not gone all power-ballad or anything like that. Not to worry, all of these songs clock in at around the two minute mark--twelve songs in twenty-four minutes means that they're not getting bogged down in their songs. They simply do what they do best--and that is ROCK--and move on. Nothing wrong with that!

You know you're going to be road-tripping this summer. You know you're going to want a great record to just blast and give no thought to listening to, and So Serious should be that record. Joe and Amanda have made a fun, no-worries record AGAIN, and they've done it well. Stop being so serious about your music and have FUN. That's what the Like Young want you to do--and when you do, you're gonna have a real good time. Guaranteed.


from New City:

Says my friend, who books a local music venue: "You need to get off these guys' dick." Says me: "Never, until they put out a bad record." With this husband-wife team's "So Serious," the bad record still hasn't come. For The Like Young (two former members of Wolfie) to trump or even equal last year's "Art Contest," they needed a superlative effort. And they did it. Guitar-driven pop songs with strong drum support are the Like Young's raison d'être, with alternating boy-girl vocals and hooks so sweetened with real sugar, you'll get the cavity of your life if you listen too much. But this isn't the Archies; inside the candy sits a seriously bitter center, and it creates a great contrast. Even though the mile-wide chorus for "Out to Get Me" sounds upbeat, they sour it with the lines, "And I know/you want to see me fail." Each of the twelve tracks on this record has that little dissonant edge, a stinging backhand to every warm embrace. And bless them for it, too: it's records like this, bands like this, that remind me why I love music.



from All Music Guide:

Now this is more like it. The Like Young's first album Art Contest was a slab of formulaic punk-pop bereft of inspiration and hooks. Their second album So Serious makes no radical changes but is about 100% better and less cute, more real. This time out they paid attention to the small things that make records interesting like arrangements, pacing, dynamics and most of all hooks. Joe and Amanda seem to have gotten the tuneless anger out of their systems and loosened things up a bit. Sure, there is still a level of aggression that was never to be found in previous group Wolfie but it is leavened by liberal use of Amanda's sweet back-up vocals and by the introduction of more instruments (cheap synths, bass and lead guitar) that keep things varied. They also make fine use of the quiet verse/loud chorus dynamic that has served every band from Weezer to the Kinks so well. The mention of Weezer is no accident since the Like Young are direct sonic descendants of that band. On the brief (12 tracks - 24 minutes) So Serious the group begins to live up to their legacy. Some of the songs like the peppy "Out to Get Me," the slow and sexy "Don't Know When to Stop" or the frantic "Be a Sinner" wouldn't sound out of place on a Weezer album. Not to say that they are Weezer, Jr. Don't get that idea from the comparisons. It's more that they both are imaginative, lyrically and vocally powerful indie rock bands that share a sonic palette. Let's just say that if you like Weezer, you will like this album, okay? Okay. Even if you don't like Weezer but are a fan of spiky, inspired punk with a pop sensibility, you will like this.

http://www.thelikeyoung.com





 
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