Our Lady Peace - Healthy in Paranoid Times
By: Johnny Loftus
August 2005
BMG
2/5 Stars
In the liners for Healthy in Paranoid Times, Our Lady Peace's first studio
album in three years, there's a photo of a wall where facts are scrawled.
"Within these 1165 days..." it says, referring to the lengthy time it took to
record the album, "11 thousand dollars was spent on food for the band." "2000
hours were spent both discussing and playing music." But then the tone changes.
"30 active wars were fought across the globe," "54 million people died from
extreme poverty." The list goes on, itemizing everything from how many hours OLP
spent on airplanes to the number of North American deaths from cancer. Are we
supposed to see the futility of rock & roll in the face of international strife
and hunger? That's certainly an honorable notion, but it seems sort of
ham-fisted, too, mostly because no one made Our Lady Peace take that long to
record their album. But it also has very little to do with the music on Healthy
in Paranoid Times. Well, in "Wipe That Smile Off Your Face," Raine Maida does
use metaphors of wars and bombs to describe a failing relationship, so maybe
he's aiming for some connectivity between the music and those suffering phrases
on the wall. Healthy is also a much moodier album than 2002's Gravity. The
highlights of that record were the Goo Goo Dolls-ish singles "Somewhere Out
There" and "Innocent." Here songs have a tendency to drag on — opener
"Angels/Losing/Sleep" plods along for nearly five minutes, and even the single
"Where Are You" — which otherwise has a peppy guitar line comparable to the
Killers — overstays its welcome with an extended "This could be the best day of
your life" singalong. But the biggest problem with Healthy in Paranoid Times,
besides its inflated thematic framework, is its lack of distinction. Our Lady
Peace has proven how good they are at approximating U2's epic scope with modern
rock atmospherics. So why did it take them over a 1000 days to do that again?