Jawbreaker I Dear You Review

Jawbreaker
“Dear You
Blackball Records

What a hectic trip it was for Bay-area legends Jawbreaker.

In the band’s eight years of existence, they managed to build up a strong fanbase, record over five albums worth or material, alienate some of their diehard fans and, in the end, even alienate their record label.

Jawbreake’s debut, 1990’s “Unfun,” was a great, raw punk album. The honesty and imperfection on the tracks is what drew many of the band’s fans. The follow-up, “Bivouac,” seemed like a more experimental album at the time, maintaining the punk roots but heading in a more alternative-rock direction with songs like “Sleep” and “Big” reminiscent of early Nirvana recordings.

With the release of 1994’s “24 Hour Revenge Therapy,” the band embraced a more radio-friendly song structure (easy chord progressions, etc.) and created probably one of their more accessible albums. Maybe it was the peaking of the grunge movement, or the rising of pop-punk bands like Green Day or Blink-182, but after “24 Hour Revenge Therapy” the band was scooped up and signed by record company behemoth DGC (David Geffen Company) and given the means (a large contract with creative control) to craft perhaps its finest album, the controversial 1995 release “Dear You.”

“Dear You” wasn’t what new fans of the band expected; it certainly wasn’t what the record company envisioned, and by ’96 Jawbreaker was no more. (Posthumously a live album — “Live 4/30/96″ — and collection of rarities and b-sides — “ETC.” — were released on Pfahle’s imprint label Blackball Records.) Schwarzenbach went on to form Jets to Brazil and the other two band members went on to various projects.

Still, the legend of Jawbreaker lived on, and fans eventually clamored to get their hands on “Dear You,” which was out of print within a few years and severely hard to track down. When copies were available, the prices were soaring (I remember finding one in a used CD store for upwards of $24).

Pfahler made his move and eventually bought the rights from Geffen. Giving long time listeners a reason to pick it up again, the “Dear You” re-release is set to include studio outtakes and b-sides (the unreleased “Shirt” along with “Into You Like a Train,” “Sister,” “Friendly Fire” and a re-recorded version of “Boxcar”) as well as the Fireman video and an expanded booklet.

As for the main content of “Dear You,” it still holds up almost 10 years later.

The disc’s opening track, “Save your Generation,” along with songs like “Chemistry” and “Bad Scene, Everyone’s Fault” are typical punk-tinged alternative rock songs with a slightly murky sound (thick guitars and noticeable bass work), a sonic direction that was on show throughout “Dear You.”

The disc’s lead off single at the time was “Fireman,” a simple track to showcase the band’s sound. The song kicks off steadily building throughout the verses with simple chords that slowly sound more frantic before the false start of a chorus into the second verse — leading, of course, to the payoff the of the intense chorus. Schwarzenbach glides through his cute yet biting lyrics like “Dreamed I was a fireman. I just smoked and watched you burn,” and “Dreamed we were still going out. Had that one a few times now. Woke up to find out we were not. It’s good to be awake.” The down-tuned guitars create an false sense of laid back atmosphere and Bauermeiste’s bass during the song’s bridge is a definite high-point.

“Jet Black” remains breathtaking: Schwarzenbac’s murky guitar riffs and deadpan vocals with thick-as-hell bass throughout the chorus compliments Pfahle’s subtle drumming throughout the song until the brief explosion at the ending.

“Accident Prone” is probably the greatest song Jawbreaker has ever made. The melancholic lyrics are delivered with more emotion than any band today claiming to be “emo.” From beginning to end, the band seems tighter than you ever thought they could be: Schwarzenbac’s lullaby-like guitar parts throughout the verses and Bauermeiste’s intentional and heavy bass lines combine with Pfale’s understated drumming and gentle cymbal work. As the song progresses, the trio suddenly picks up speed through the bridge to the chorus before opening up full-force and tearing through the chorus with a definitely mission in mind. Mid-way through the song everything seems to finally come apart, the drums and guitar accentuate a nice bass breakdown and the band again begins to build up steam “¦ faster and faster until the intensity is almost too much to handle and a release is achieved through the chorus again — yes, it’s as close to a sexual moment as you can have in a song. Words could never do “Accident Prone” justice and it is definitely the highlight of “Dear You.”

For the original tracks alone, “Dear You” would still be a great disc to add to your collection; the added tracks are just the icing on the cake. The “Fireman” video had moderate airplay on MTV’s Alternative Nation back when it was released, and while it doesn’t quiet translate the band’s live energy, it’s still worth a viewing.

“Dear You” should see re-release sometime in March, 2004, but nothing has been finalized. For more information, check out http://www.blackballrecords.com. (There’s a nice section on the Web site were Schwarzenbach talks about each of the tracks on “Dear You.”)

Jonathan Widro is the owner and founder of Inside Pulse. Over a decade ago he burst onto the scene with a pro-WCW reporting style that earned him the nickname WCWidro. Check him out on Twitter for mostly inane non sequiturs