Audio By Carbonatix
If Sum 41 sounds hardened on its fourth album, there’s good reason: The title refers to the name of a United Nations volunteer who helped the Canadian punk pranksters dodge bullets and explosions in the Congo, where the group was on a charity mission in 2003. The bandmembers haven’t totally lost their sense of humor — the video for the disc’s first single, “We’re All to Blame,” spoofs gyrating Solid Gold dancers — but spending time in the trenches certainly shook the mall-punk residue from their tunes.
Expounding upon the snarling metal fantasies of 2002’s “The Hell Song,” Chuck sounds battle-scarred. Jagged-lightning riffage and fret-shredding tempos dredge up the war-weary intensity of Black Sabbath or late-’80s Metallica (“The Bitter End”), while more punkish tunes (especially the no-brakes, Damned-esque “No Reason”) sound like a war zone. Vocalist Deryck Whibley’s nasally attempts at metal-dude gruffness backfire every so often — causing a few cuts to skulk like shady Linkin Park castoffs — but Chuck is both a loving homage to Sum 41’s headbanging heroes and an impressive progression.
When news happens, Westword is there —
Your support strengthens our coverage.
We’re aiming to raise $50,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to this community. If Westword matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.