Methadones leader Daniel Schafer has said that the band's third album,
Not Economically Viable, is a concept record loosely inspired by the 1993 Michael Douglas film Falling Down, about a murderous rampage by a laid-off defense systems administrator. (The title comes from one of the film's key lines.) Lyrically, the album is akin to the great
X albums deconstructing the Reagan-era American dream, from
Los Angeles to
More Fun in the New World, but Schafer is a more impressionistic writer than
John Doe and
Exene Cervenka, without their eye for detail. Musically, however, the album completes
the Methadones' slow transition from garagey punks à la early
Social Distortion into a more polished power pop outfit with a greater emphasis on vocals (
Heavenly's
Amelia Fletcher sings her trademark helium-toned harmonies on several tracks) and catchy guitar hooks. Not at all coincidentally, the album ends with the aptly-titled "Straight Up Pop Song," a rueful blend of sardonic kiss-off lyrics and a droning guitar riff that sounds so much like a radio hit by the likes of
Jimmy Eat World that it seems likely to be at least partially satiric in intent. ~ Stewart Mason