Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace - The Offspring

Josh Maule  |  6 October 2008  
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Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace
The Offspring
Sony BMG
2008

For every fan the Offspring have made over the years, they have probably offended a handful of self-respecting people. That just seems to be the way they operate. They leave insulted people in their wake.

While their new album – Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace – is certainly no leisurely stroll in the park, the band seem more mature than they used to be. They’re writing songs like adults, rather than reluctant grown-ups.

From the front cover of the album, it is clear that they are dealing with some evil themes. Spread across the CD is a graphic depiction of a red, winged, demon with arrows stuck in its heart. It has shackles on its wrists and is surrounded by an expanse of blackness. The image sets the listener up for what they’re about to hear.

With chugging distortion, cracking drums, group vocals, lots of ‘whoas’, and Dexter Holland singing high for extended periods, the record is really what you’d expect from the Offspring. The only difference is that this album sounds much more ‘produced’ than Offspring album’s used to be.

Theme-wise though, the record is darker than usual. It’s not that the band haven’t written dark songs before, it’s just that this album is totally consumed by bleakness. A few snippets from the lyrics will show you what I mean.

From ‘Takes Me Nowhere’:
“When the day begins
All the guilt sinks in
And I look on the wreckage of the night.”

From ‘Stuff is Messed up’:
“You know it’s all about the dream
The ends justify the means.
Shopping sprees, RPGs
Ecstasy
Atrophy
Genocide
Pimp my ride
Politize
Euphemize
Injustice everywhere.”

And from ‘Let’s Hear It For Rock Bottom’:
“We’re hitting rock bottom
Call me anyway
Cause I got two friends
Wasting away
We’re all going down together.”

The band are literally screaming for the world they see around them. They feel the pain, the destruction, the meaninglessness, the injustice, the uselessness and the steady decline of the human race.

The saddest song is ‘Kristy, are you doing okay?’ It speaks of the severe tragedy of a girl who is abused and violated. “Your eyes told the tale of an act of betrayal,” the words go, “Can you stay strong? Can you hold on?” Then comes the plea: “Don’t waste your life trying to get back what was taken away.”

So what should Christians take away from such a painfully black album?

I have no knock down solution. But maybe we should reflect on the squalor and shame many people live with. The tragedies that never go away. The guilt of bad mistakes. The pain and complication of daily existence. And then reflect even longer on our wonderful saviour who removes all guilt and shame so that there is “no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus”.

It is easy for us to ‘always look on the bright side of life’, but I don’t think we’re called to ignore the destruction around us. Rather, we are to live for the God who will one day finally overcome all misery.

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