McLusky
The Difference Between Me and You Is That I'm Not On Fire
Label ©  Unknown
Release Year  2004
Length  40:41
Genre  Indie Rock
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  M-0034
Bitrate  ~267 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Without MSG I am Nothing  
       2:56  
      2.  
      That Man Will Not Hang  
       3:00  
      3.  
      She Will Only Bring You Happiness  
       3:27  
      4.  
      KKKitchens, What Were You Thinking?  
       1:50  
      5.  
      Your Children are Waiting for You to Die  
       3:53  
      6.  
      Icarus Smicarus  
       1:51  
      7.  
      Slay!  
       2:54  
      8.  
      You Should Be Ashamed, Seamus  
       4:40  
      9.  
      Lucky Jim  
       2:02  
      10.  
      Forget About Him I'm Mint  
       1:46  
      11.  
      1956 and All That  
       2:24  
      12.  
      Falco vs. the Young Canoeist  
       2:10  
      13.  
      Support Systems  
       7:48  
    Additional info: | top
      Working again with sonic wizard Steve Albini, Mclusky offer up their rawest-to-date album with The Difference Between Me and You Is That I'm Not on Fire. While it's not as catchy or melodic as Mclusky Do Dallas, the band's third full-length is just as much of a thunderous assault. Albini frequently buries the mad screams of Andy Falkous beneath a mountain of scratchy, barbaric guitars, and the band seems for the most part more serious than usual. But with song titles like "Your Children Are Waiting for You to Die" and mad chants about traveling by rickshaw, boogie board, and x-wings, ample wit still rears its head. If the overall feel veered toward the Pixies in the past, here there's an experimental touch that often recalls the Fall, Wire, and Pavement. One can argue either that Falkous is more angry or that he's maturing as a composer. Either way, listeners weaned on 1990s staples like Girls Against Boys and Jesus Lizard will find much to love, as the album almost feels like a love letter to aggressive 1990s Indie Rock. The overt weirdness and sociopathic vibes of the band's previous albums have been replaced by a focus on funky, flailing guitars that are simultaneously Punk and Thrash. Albini's hands are all over this album, or one might say, not all over the album, as one gets the sense that this is the unadorned sound of the band simply destroying the studio. The Difference Between Me and You Is That I'm Not on Fire is an invigorating and glorious mess of undistilled Rock fury. — Tim DiGravina
    Links/Resources | top