March on Electric Children | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by The Blood Brothers | ||||
Released | Feb 25, 2002 | |||
Genre | Post-hardcore | |||
Length | 24:38 | |||
Label | 31G | |||
Producer | Matt Bayles | |||
The Blood Brothers chronology | ||||
|
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Stylus Magazine | [2] |
March on Electric Children is the second studio album by the American post-hardcore band The Blood Brothers, released in February 2002. This album is a self-described short story set to music.[3] Produced by Matt Bayles, the album was recorded in one week [4] on a $3000 budget [5] and has been described by singer Jordan Blilie as "crazier" and "more complex" than the band's previous effort, This Adultery Is Ripe[6].
The album has been described by numerous critics as a concept album, with its characters portrayed more as villains and victims than as heroes. The effort was an attempt by the band to create a storyline with repeating characters that has a bleak outlook on life, emphasizing the consequences of the characters' selfish choices. The album's closing track "American Vultures" is the conclusion to the storyline and wraps up the themes featured in the previous songs. Says singer Jordan Blilie:
Basically what we had in mind was that we wanted to focus on what happens when a person lives a life devoid of any real meaning. These are people that lead a very empty superficial existence where motives are completely selfish and empty, and what happens as a result of that choice.
All songs written by The Blood Brothers.