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 | | In line at the record store I 
found myself thinking, why am I buying another Green Day album?  I knew I’d like 
the songs, but why spend money on another disc from the band that brought the world 
Dookie?  I expected a fast-paced barrage of nouveau punk, but after a glance at 
the back of the case, I realized this wasn’t going to be an ordinary offering from this 
band.| 
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 I first noticed that two of the songs are broken up into five-part 
mini-sections a la Black Sabbath's self-titled album.  While reading over some of the 
liner notes, having unwrapped the CD while still in line, I found words that no 
self-respecting band has had the nerve to use in my lifetime:  “rock opera.”  I 
shuddered.  The last legitimate artist to put out one of these egomaniacal, and often 
cheesy attempts at avant-guard music was (gulp) Meatloaf.  I was really getting 
concerned.  Just what was I supporting?
 
 My curiosity would not be placated 
and moments later I headed to the car stereo to find out whether they could pull it off.  
The title track was already a commercial success, so it was no surprise that it’s the 
first song.  I grew nervous as the first new track approached, "Jesus of Suburbia,” one 
of two songs on the album that are a series of amalgamated shorter tracks lumped together 
to form a loose storyline.
 
 This is a work so pure and honest, so 
skillfully crafted and engaging that it may be the first "must have" album since Nirvana 
released Nevermind.  By the time I got to "Boulevard of Broken Dreams," I decided 
this is the greatest thing Green Day has ever done.  They've accomplished something that 
few artists have, producing a work so interdependent, that it would be a shame if anyone 
just downloaded one or two tracks.  This is the first time in nearly a decade that I have 
not been disappointed with an album as a whole.
 
 This album may seem 
lackluster for Green Day fans, since it can be slow at times.  Though songs like 
“American Idiot,” “She's a Rebel” and “Letterbomb” add the necessary spike to the 
punch.
 
 This disc is fantastic and delivers Green Day from the purgatory of 
pop/punk, placing them alongside bands like the Beatles and the Who.  It offers hope that 
the state of affairs overseas may usher in a utopian creativity, much like what happened 
in the sixties.  Whether it’s an example of socio-political commentary or simply a very 
good disc, I’m glad that I decided to buy what ended up being not just another Green Day 
album.
 
 
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