Does Demolicious count after the pop outings Unos!, Duos!, Tres!? The demos definitely re cast many of the songs on those albums in a much more mainstream Green Day sound.VinylGuy wrote:I would say Green Day's American Idiot maybe?
Self-conscious "return to form" albums
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Think I’m going to try being kind to everyone a chance.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Jay Bennett over Nels any day and twice on leap yeartragabigzanda wrote:Hard disagree. I don't know that they've ever made a return to form album, because each album is its own animal. Only Wilco (The Album) feels like an attempt at crowd pleasing, but it fell in their discography more as a collection of everything they'd done before rather than an attempt to gain back lost fans.Jorge wrote:Also, wasn't Wilco's The Whole Love kind of this? I didn't get into it too much but I vaguely remember track 1 "Art of Almost" feeling kind of like the band going "don't worry guys -- we can still get weird!"
Pretty sure strat is the only Wilco fan who's been disappointed since Nels joines.
Dick/Balls
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
This album still regularly goes on our turntable, usually on weekend mornings. A beautiful piece & I still can’t fathom why the label rejected it.tragabigzanda wrote:Cat Power - Wanderer
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Thirded.verb_to_trust wrote:Jay Bennett over Nels any day and twice on leap yeartragabigzanda wrote:Hard disagree. I don't know that they've ever made a return to form album, because each album is its own animal. Only Wilco (The Album) feels like an attempt at crowd pleasing, but it fell in their discography more as a collection of everything they'd done before rather than an attempt to gain back lost fans.Jorge wrote:Also, wasn't Wilco's The Whole Love kind of this? I didn't get into it too much but I vaguely remember track 1 "Art of Almost" feeling kind of like the band going "don't worry guys -- we can still get weird!"
Pretty sure strat is the only Wilco fan who's been disappointed since Nels joines.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Count me in, even though I'm not sure it's mainly due to Jay and Nels. A Ghost is Born features neither and that was the last great Wilco record for me. I'd love for them to work with Jim O'Rourke again.LetMeSleep wrote:Thirded.verb_to_trust wrote:Jay Bennett over Nels any day and twice on leap yeartragabigzanda wrote:Hard disagree. I don't know that they've ever made a return to form album, because each album is its own animal. Only Wilco (The Album) feels like an attempt at crowd pleasing, but it fell in their discography more as a collection of everything they'd done before rather than an attempt to gain back lost fans.Jorge wrote:Also, wasn't Wilco's The Whole Love kind of this? I didn't get into it too much but I vaguely remember track 1 "Art of Almost" feeling kind of like the band going "don't worry guys -- we can still get weird!"
Pretty sure strat is the only Wilco fan who's been disappointed since Nels joines.
Regarding the topic: I think Tom Waits' Bad As Me feels similar. A sort of "best of" of his former styles.
The recent Flaming Lips record also feels like going back to a Soft Bulletin/Yoshimi sound.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Good pick, and good thread.BurtReynolds wrote:metallica - Death Magnetic
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
to be honest i never heard any GD album besides Dookie and Warning. But it felt like with AI success every release has been a "return to form" in the media.surfndestroy wrote:Does Demolicious count after the pop outings Unos!, Duos!, Tres!? The demos definitely re cast many of the songs on those albums in a much more mainstream Green Day sound.VinylGuy wrote:I would say Green Day's American Idiot maybe?
ugh do you guys remember the last single?
BONE FUCKIN´ TOMAHAWK.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Nas - stillmatic
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Rancid - indestructible
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 9:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
For Rancid I think it was the 2000 self-titled. They were both returning to their hardcore roots and scaling back after the sprawling, eclectic weirdness of LIfe Won't Wait, which was seen as a bit of a bellyflop after ...And Out Come the Wolvesi got bugs wrote:Rancid - indestructible
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Which reminds me. After Bad Religion hilariously ventured into the proggy, synthy sounds of Into the Unknown (which was derided by fans and sold very little) their next release was a self-conscious "return to form" EP called Back to the Known.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Whole Love definitely fits this thread cateogry. You're so into Wilco you can't see the significant decline you fool!!!!!!!tragabigzanda wrote:Hard disagree. I don't know that they've ever made a return to form album, because each album is its own animal. Only Wilco (The Album) feels like an attempt at crowd pleasing, but it fell in their discography more as a collection of everything they'd done before rather than an attempt to gain back lost fans.Jorge wrote:Also, wasn't Wilco's The Whole Love kind of this? I didn't get into it too much but I vaguely remember track 1 "Art of Almost" feeling kind of like the band going "don't worry guys -- we can still get weird!"
Pretty sure strat is the only Wilco fan who's been disappointed since Nels joines.
Star Wars rules though
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Lol the Huffpo review headline is literally "Wilco Returns to Form With The Whole Love" https://www.huffpost.com/entry/wilco-th ... e_b_984256
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Mon January 12, 2026 9:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
I think that 2000 was a little TOO hardcore where indestructible sounds more like wolves or let's goJorge wrote:For Rancid I think it was the 2000 self-titled. They were both returning to their hardcore roots and scaling back after the sprawling, eclectic weirdness of LIfe Won't Wait, which was seen as a bit of a bellyflop after ...And Out Come the Wolvesi got bugs wrote:Rancid - indestructible
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
I've been thinking about this one and I have a hard time putting it into this category. The personnel change kind of complicates matters, but I'm more inclined to hear One Hot Minute as a sort of forced diversion, and Californication at once as a regrouping and a natural move forward, picking up where BSSM left off.tragabigzanda wrote:I'm torn on RHCP's Californication. It came after the heavy rock - psychedelia of One Hot Minute (made w/Dave Navarro on guitar), but it still pushed some new boundaries while welcoming John Frusciante back into the fold
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
Aren’t we talking less about the result, and more about the marketing?tragabigzanda wrote:What form do you guys think they’re returning to on that album? The deconstructionist experimentalism of YHF/AGIB? Or the alt-country vibes of AM/BT? Because apart from a few specific songs, I don’t find any of that stuff to be overwhelmingly present on TWL.
Sky Blue Sky is the better album.
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Re: Self-conscious "return to form" albums
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