Life On Display – Paul Hanson

Life On Display
Geffen Records, 2003
Reviewed by Paul Hanson
Published on Mar 2, 2004

Puddle of Mudd burst onto the rock scene with
Come Clean, a release that I liked from day one. I admit
that, freely. I am a Puddle of Mudd fan, hooked from the first time
I heard “Control” on
Rock 108.

The best I can say is that I knew there was something special
about the band. “I love the way you slap my ass” was the lyric that
really hooked me, summing that song’s attitude — confrontational
and rough, yet compassionate. One of their follow-up singles “She
Hates Me” solidified the band, in my mind anyway, as being the real
deal. Sure, it’s a silly song, and sure, it reminds me of Nirvana,
but by the time that song hit the radio stations, I was listening
to the entire CD, repeatedly, hooking me on the band even more. In
my opinion,
Come Clean was one of the best debut releases by a rock
band. For the record, I’d put Ratt’s
Out Of The Cellar and Guns-n-Roses’
Appetite For Destruction in the same category. There was not
a bad track and each listen got better.

I purchased
Life On Display, their current release, after only hearing
the lead-off track and first single, shortly after it was released.
On
Life On Display, the band takes the best traits of their
debut and kicks the intensity into high gear. I have been listening
to this CD as much as
Come Clean when it was first released. What the band has
done this time, though, is write songs that don’t repave the roads
on
Come Clean. There’s neither a “She Hates Me Part II” nor a
“Control Part II.”

Instead, vocalist/guitarist Wesley Reid Scantlin confronts other
demons, like the dreaded sophomore release by a band that broke
into the world with a blockbuster release. “Nothing Left to Lose”
examines this idea with the lyrics “We’ve got nothing left to lose/
You always get your way/ We’ve got everything to prove.” Elsewhere,
in “Think,” Scantlin is reflective, “So I drink drink drink drink
drink / I’m putting down the drink/ Because I can’t feel a thing/
Everytime I say good-bye/ I’ve seen that look/ A thousand times/
There’s no room left inside.”

“Bottom” starts with a mean bass groove from Douglas John Ardito
and tom-tom fills from Greg Upchurch before Scantlin and guitarist
Paul Phillips enter with an airy guitar riff. The groove is tight,
the angst is real when Scantlin sings “I’m just sitting at the
bottom with you.”

Perhaps the strongest song of the 12 songs on this release is
“Freak of the World,” the slower riff working to the band’s
advantage as Scantlin’s vocal performance is convincingly
anquished. So far,
Life On Display is a leading contender for CD of the year,
even if it was released in 2003.

Author’s note: The recent event in Toledo, OH,
described by the hosting radio station happened
shortly after this review was written. Regardless of this incident,
I think that this CD stands.

Rating: A

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