Review
Never Looking Back
Fragile Hearts

Detonate (2007) Jason

Never Looking Back – Fragile Hearts cover artwork
Never Looking Back – Fragile Hearts — Detonate, 2007

Here we go again. Once again we have yet another young hardcore band, this time hailing from Tacoma, WA, playing overly sincere emotional overcharged hardcore. If you have heard Modern Life is War, Comeback Kid, or maybe Shai Hulud you get the gist of what Never Looking Back is trying to accomplish. If you can sense my boredom right now, you've just won yourself a prize.

I don't hate Never Looking Back, it's hard to hate on a band that obviously has their hearts in the right place. It's even harder for me to hate a band that gives out lyric explanations. That will always and forever earn a decent amount of respect no matter what style of hardcore a band wants to play. I've just heard the double bass drumming so many times it sounds like jackhammer in my skull, and not in the good way either. I've heard one too many songs where everyone piles on the singer and screams about being alone or being alive or whatever else they need to get off their chest. The mosh parts on Fragile Hearts are so predictable that your local nutty weatherperson could tell when they are coming six months ahead. And does it come to any surprise that the title track start off with an acoustic guitar, some violins, and drums that keep building and building until we hear yet another poorly played metallic riff. Every song follows the same boring mid-tempo pattern that I feel like I'm listening to the audio equivalent of Inspector Gadget cartoons. Gadget takes the case. Gadget bumbles the case. Penny and Brain solve the case. Gadget takes the credit. Dr. Claw gets away. It happened in every episode. Wash. Rinse. Repeat.

I really hate to give Fragile Hearts a low score in fear of anonymous IM's from fifteen year saying, "I'm just a bitter old fart that doesn't know anything about good hardcore." True, I may be a bitter old fart but I know good hardcore when I hear it and Never Looking Back isn't it. They may have you kids moshing your collective nuts off in VFW's around Tacoma. However, here in my living room in Saint Paul I'm bored as hell. Maybe in time Never Looking Back will learn to write more interesting songs. Well one can hope, but right now I'm not looking back to Never Looking Back any time soon when I want to hear some decent hardcore.

2.0 / 10Jason • September 11, 2007

Never Looking Back – Fragile Hearts cover artwork
Never Looking Back – Fragile Hearts — Detonate, 2007

Recently-posted album reviews

Miller Lowlifes

Pinch Hitters
ADD Records (2025)

The debut album from Florida punk band Miller Lowlifes features a vintage baseball theme, best enjoyed with a can of cheap domestic beer in hand. The metaphor fits, as Pinch Hitters focuses on the American dream -- and where it stands in 2025. The vintage educational TV audio clips add to this past-meets-present theme. It's an album that's equally about … Read more

Art Brut

Sorry, That It Doesn't Sound Like It's Planned! Battling Satan, 2009 - 2020
Edsel Records (2025)

I’ve never reviewed a box set before but Art Brut released my favourite sprechgesang anti-art-punk album of the early aughts so I figured I’d give it a go. 2005’s Bang Bang Rock & Roll placed Art Brut among the “Art Wave” scene but was more post-punk revival than “Indie Sleaze”. Argos has cited Jonathan Richman and Axl Rose as his … Read more

The Slow Death

No Light To See
Don’t Sing Records (2025)

Few bands have as fitting a name as The Slow Death. They play forlorn, self-deprecating punk that’s heavily influenced by lonesome country. The music itself is more driving and punchy, but many of the lyrics would fit just well in a somber old-timey country ballad. It’s forceful music that punches inward instead of at The Man. The first song is … Read more