Hearing Aide: Mick Fury Releases New Album ‘1981-1996’

Syracuse-born, Nashville-based artist Mick Fury dropped his latest project earlier this summer titled 1981-1996. In a popular music landscape congested with hollow lyrics, cheap sentiments, and reused sounds, the album stands out for its conceptuality and thematic elements. Focused on the trials and tribulations of millennials across the United States, the album touches on topics and ideas usually avoided by mainstream stars. 

We’re the most open-minded, hard-working-for-beans, thoughtful generation yet, and we’ve watched the American Dream be snatched away from us like bullies taking a kid’s lunch money

Mick Fury

Takeaways

The album’s Nashville influence is inescapable: from Fury’s country-rock tone, to the up-tempo and twangy guitar patterns, and even to the country references of dirt, whiskey, roads, and rust. Despite 1981-1996’s country leanings, Fury, along with Max McKee (bass, guitar) and Nate Felty (drums, percussion), also incorporates elements of rock, alt-rock, and even post-grunge into the project. While the instrumentation and arrangement on the album is not the centerpiece, the trio do a good job at giving space for Fury’s lyricism to shine.

With ten songs and a 33-minute runtime, 1981-1996 wastes no time getting into the topic of the project. The album opens with a 42-second recording of sensationalized claims about millennials in the style of a cable news broadcast titled “The Perception.” Angry voices yell out phrases like “snowflakes” and argue that “they want to demand respect that they don’t deserve” or that “they have traded achievement for victimhood”. The track helps tune the listener in for what Fury wants to address in the ensuing songs. 

Fury begins the music by inspecting his childhood and the innocence of youth with the song “Bright Eyed Dumb Kid.” The tune is reflective in nature and touches on a topic that many listeners can relate to. Its palatable drums and calm country guitar strums make the song an easy listen. Despite the track’s clear focus, its lyrics differ from the harsh and poignant sentiments espoused on “The Perception.” 

Highlights

As the album continues, Fury finds his groove with “Can’t Let Go” and “State of the Union.” The former perfectly demonstrates the singer’s smooth and comfortable delivery, helping to lull the listener into a foot-tapping trance. Fury’s lyrics about being lost and stuck without a purpose match perfectly with the songs’ alt-rock rhythm. “State of the Union” on the other hand is a fast paced track filled with attitude and frustration. The song is arguably where Fury is his most critical and thoughtful on the album. The artist highlights many of the flaws in American society with lyrics like, “Go to school for years to get your degree, get out and get a job then hopefully, we’ll get you out of debt and get you out of this town, you’ll be paying that off until you’re in the ground.” 

“We go looking for hope, some kind of savior, pills, presidents, conspiracies, creators, trying to find the way through the dark but it keeps getting later”

Mick Fury on “State of the Union”

“Broken Highway” is most likely Fury’s most ambitious song on 1981-1996. The track features a blend of rock, country, psych-rock, and alt-rock to create a sound that channels the atmosphere of early 2000s radio anthems. The song is ripe with layered production and features some of the best instrumentation on the project. 

Following up “Broken Highway” is “Burnin’ It Down,” which is a pleasant return to Fury’s country-rock sound. The track showcases the artist’s creativity as Fury plays with the idea of a traditional country song. Positioned as a classic “America-first” hit, the track takes aim at many of the problematic elements associated with the nation. Mick Fury sings, “Everyday there’s another threat, from some enemy I ain’t never met, we got money for missiles and fuck-all for the vets.” The artist goes on to critique the narrow-minded view that many Americans have. He writes “nothing’s wrong and nothing’s right, you ain’t looking past your own life.” 

mick fury panama

1981-1996 is conceptually profound and highlights the ingenuity and creativity of Mick Fury. While the album doesn’t reinvent the wheel sonically, Fury sounds right at home on just about all the tracks. The singer’s lyricism and writing is ultimately what drives the project. What the album lacks in nuance and specificity, it makes up for in digestibility and familiarity. In all, the album is a breath of fresh air as it looks to address a topic often untouched by others in the same lane.

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