Everything from the heavy political slant, the skill of the musicianship (to which they admit they wrote songs that were more complex and complicated than their abilities at the time, forcing them to practice relentlessly just to play the god damn thing), to the album's philosophical backdrop show a level of depth and planning that clashes against the image of drunken goofballs that, through over a half dozen music videos and countless interviews, they, and their livers, have worked hard to build and maintain. Don't follow? Well, take an album like Kezia, the band's 2005 debut. Protest the Hero have always seemed like one of those bands that take themselves completely seriously yet at the same time take nothing seriously at all. Review Summary: Truth be told, it's getting a bit ridiculous how they're able to consistently be this damn good.
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