Broken Social Scene - Forgiveness Rock Record

During their five-year hiatus, one could assume that Broken Social Scene frontman Kevin Drew had been trimming his garden of friends substantially. On Forgiveness Rock Record, he notes a mere seven collaborators - leaner indeed, compared with the 22 credited on their previously self-titled album. That said, he knows how to pick them, with Metric's Emily Haines, Stars' Amy Milan and the gorgeous Leslie Feist among the survivors. Perhaps ironically, then comes the forgiveness factor.

As the tile suggests, this is a rock and roll record that through its songs explores the emotional process of forgiving, forgetting and moving forward together. From the macro distress of World Sick to Haines' deeply personal Sentimental X's, it's thick with catharsis and human release. It's also the most song-based record the band has even mustered. Where You Forgot It In People was sprawling and tangential, Forgiveness Rock sets it up and knocks it down with steadier structures and that stronger rock inclination.

Co-produced by Tortoise/Sea and Cake drummer John McEntire, it's exactly as we remember their intense aesthetic only sharper, more focused and perhaps better behaved - much like the Broken Social Scene/Sea and Cake contrast. This may alienate those who fell for the granidose and immersing instrumentals of the band's recent history, though the joy here is within our human connection to story. It's a nice thought, and one that's terribly reliant. And after all, who couldn't use a little forgiveness?

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