Atlanta's Andy Hull and company received considerable praise leading up to Mean Everything to Nothing, Manchester Orchestra's second official full-length release. With that praise and hype came the attention of producer Joe Chiccarelli (the Shins/My Morning Jacket, who adds enough muscle, sound, and fury to the music to match Hull's frequent growls and rants. The resulting dynamic attack will likely please the screamo crowd, as songs like "Shake It Out" feature the kind of angsty lyrics (fighting the Lord), yelping Isaac Brock meets nu-metal swagger, and power chords that thrill a young audience. More savvy, or at least older, music fans will be able to pick out the influences instantly: from the Kurt Cobain wail and Nirvana-like grunge pop of "In My Teeth," to the Smashing Pumpkins by way of Jane's Addiction guitars of the catchy by somewhat overly earnest "I've Got Friends," to the wounded-voice Bright Eyes aping of "The River," to the all-out, nearly embarrassing Neutral Milk Hotel ripoff that is "100 Dollars," which should see Hull mailing a royalty check to Jeff Mangum. From the voice-breaking delivery to the atonal guitar shards, the song should basically come with a copyright disclaimer. Mean Everything to Nothing doesn't know what kind of album it wants to be, and that's either charming/eclectic or annoying/amateurish, depending on an individual listener's sensibilities. The constant shifting from jangling alt-country to grunge to indie eclecticism gets tiring over multiple listens. Mean Everything to Nothing has its moments and shows Hull to be a decent enough songwriter, but there's ultimately too much outright mimicry on display and not enough originality for it to have any longevity. ~ Tim DiGravina, All Music Guide
Mean Everything to Nothing
04/21/2009 | Sony
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CD
$11.99MEAN EVERYTHING TO NOTHING
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LP
$19.99MEAN EVERYTHING TO NOTHING (OGV)
Videos from Mean Everything to Nothing
All Music Guide Review
Mean Everything to Nothing Track Listing
Mean Everything to Nothing Notes
Mean Everything To Nothing, the second album from Atlanta's Manchester Orchestra, is everything you want a rock record to be: raw, urgent, emotional, and 100 percent authentic. "There is nothing fake about this record," says frontman and lyricist Andy Hull. "There's not one fake sound on it. We recorded it live because we wanted it to sound like a band, and I think it does: live and loud!"
The drama is magnified by the fact that the album's first six songs bleed into one another without stopping. The blistering opener "The Only One" immediately gives way to the propulsive "Shake It Out" and the torrential first single "I've Got Friends," followed by the anguished "Pride" and the menacing "In My Teeth," before slowing down on the darkly funny "100 Dollars." Then the album pauses and down-shifts into less relentless yet equally gripping territory on songs from "I Can Feel A Hot One" (which was featured on Gossip Girl last September), to the ruminative closer "The River."
Credits of Mean Everything to Nothing
- Jack Hedges
- Product Manager
- Mary Alice Hull
- Vocals, Handclapping
- Megan OConnell
- Help
- Robert McDowell
- Guitar, Vocals (Background), Group Member
- Billy Mims
- Assistant Engineer
- Mat Young
- Help
- Steve Ralbovsky
- A&R
- James Minchin
- Photography
- Frank Harkins
- Art Direction
- Oliver Kraus
- Violin, Cello
- Dan Hannon
- Guitar, Engineer, Producer, Keyboards
- Jay Harren
- A&R
- Lowell Reynolds
- Assistant Engineer
- Erica Froman
- Vocals
- Andy Hull
- Guitar, Vocals, Group Member, Keyboards
- Jonathan Corley
- Bass, Group Member, Vocals
- Jeremiah Edmond
- Percussion, Drums, Art Direction, Art Manipulation, Group Member, Photo Manipulation, Vocals
- Chris Freeman
- Percussion, Keyboards, Vocals, Group Member
- Ryan Hobbs
- Assistant Engineer
- Joe Chiccarelli
- Producer, Mixing, Consultant
- Ted Jensen
- Mastering
- Woody Allen
- Author

























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