On her previous albums, there’s been a clear split between the two
Avrils: the snotty punk who twirls gum on one finger while flipping you the bird with the other hand, and the earnest, ultra-emotive power balladeer singing "I'm with You." On her seventh set,
Love Sux,
Lavigne has put all her eggs in the former basket, delivering a no-frills blast for fans of "Sk8r Boi," "He Wasn’t," and "Girlfriend." In fact, the album that "Girlfriend" called home, 2007's
The Best Damn Thing, might be the last time she sounded this fun and carefree while rocking out. Incidentally, it was also the first time she worked with her new label boss and this album's drummer,
Travis Barker. Together, the pair deliver an unrelenting blast of pissed-off breakup anthems for the frustrated and exhausted. With gloves off and F-bombs at the ready,
Lavigne and pop-punk's cool uncle du jour press pause on her late-era maturation (last heard on 2019's triumphant
Head Above Water) and get back to bratty, rebellious basics. Indeed, she’s so focused on the snarling attitude that there’s not a single slow song on the entire album ("Avalanche" and "Dare to Love Me" come close but they quickly expand to towering conclusions). Instead, it’s raucous anthems aplenty with the help of
Barker and various associates within his revivalist orbit, which works to varying degrees of success. The
Machine Gun Kelly and
Blackbear collaborations fall a little flat –
Lavigne doesn't need them at all – while an endearing duet with
Mark Hoppus ("All I Wanted") forms an appropriate bridge of generational nostalgia that'll be a highlight for fans missing the early 2000s. Aside from that almost-
blink-182 reunion,
Love Sux works best when
Lavigne has main billing, her rage propelled by chugging riffs and
Barker's trademark pogo drums. Kiss-off anthems "Bite Me" and "F.U." are thrilling singalong highlights, while the title track drops classic "na-na-na" chants through an explosive surge of punk electricity and quotable lines like "When I think of you/I just wanna throw up."
Love Sux brims with such attitude on a dozen juicy takedowns, combining buoyant punk-influenced energy and
Lavigne's trademark spunk and unfiltered defiance. After a decade of artistic exploration and soul-searching, the self-proclaimed "motherf*ckin princess" has reclaimed her pop-punk crown. ~ Neil Z. Yeung