Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 10/05/2004
Good Charlotte's popularity exploded in 2002, when the brash singles
"Anthem" and
"Lifestyles of the Rich and the Famous" catapulted them to the top of the
punk-pop heap. Once there they couldn't be stopped, at least in part because they endorsed their
pop side as much as their
punk-derived image. When naysayers tried pointing out the music's lack of substance,
Charlotte's irascible core -- tattooed brothers
Benji and
Joel Madden -- challenged them with the issue of
"Boys and Girls," a vacuous yet irresistibly fizzy
new wave-styled goof.
The Chronicles of Life and Death,
Good Charlotte's first post-fame album, uses that status as a loosely binding concept.
The Maddens are unquestionably happy with their celebrity. But they've also realized that money won't always buy happiness, or heal their old scars. After an indulgent string section intro, the title track begins to the beep of a heart-rate monitor. "Money talks/In this world,"
Joel Madden sings the song's modified
power pop strut. "That's what idiots will say/But you'll find out/That this world/Is just an idiot's parade." It's the jaded realization on the other side of
"Lifestyles"' stardom-baiting. Whereas their previous effort was, with a few notable exceptions, boisterous
punk-pop,
Chronicles includes an echoing relationship-woe piano
ballad (
"The Truth"), the subdued
"Ghost of You"'s synthesizers and vocal harmonies, and quirky keyboards and acoustic guitars in the lyrically bitter
"The World Is Black" ("I can't live when this world keeps dying...").
Joel Madden has also matured since
The Young and the Hopeless -- his newly developed husky tenor suits him well on the more introspective material, but can still belt out the rousing
punk-pop choruses of
"Walk Away (Maybe)," "Predictable," and
"Secrets." The album's best track might be its greatest departure.
"I Just Wanna Live" is a punchy blend of power chords, string samples, and
disco beats that features
Madden rapping in a
Nelly-inspired flow. For all their well-crafted ambition on
Chronicles,
"I Just Wanna Live" feels like
Good Charlotte's centerpiece, since it's spiked with
rock power, but gets its soul from the
pop life they lead. [
The Chronicles of Life and Death was issued in "
Life" and "Death, All Music Guide