Thinking big has never been a problem for Titus Andronicus, as a look at their grand-scale concept albums The Monitor (2010) and The Most Lamentable Tragedy (2015) demonstrates. However, the groups frontman and main songwriter, Patrick Stickles, has decided this level of grandeur just isnt enough, and for 2022s The Will to Live, he stated it was his ambition to create an Ultimate Rock Album, a towering rock & roll blockbuster in the grand tradition of the Whos Whos Next and Bruce Springsteens Born in the U.S.A. The Ultimate Rock Album, of course, demands a grand theme, and the passing of Stickles friend and former bandmate Matt "Money" Miller inspired The Will to Lives larger narrative, as the protagonist struggles to overcome a blighted upbringing and some truly regrettable life choices in pursuit of the elusive reason behind life and living. As a songwriter, Stickles certainly knows how to tell a compelling story, in individual chapters as well as on a larger whole, but its the music that gives The Will to Live the weight and power he aspires to. Producer Howard Bilerman has gone above and beyond to make this sound heroic, with the core band (guitarist Liam Betson, bassist R.J. Gordon, and drummer Chris Wilson) augmented by a small army of guests, among them Tim Kingsbury of the Arcade Fire, Tad Kubler of the Hold Steady, and Jake Clemons of Bruce Springsteens E-Street Band. The finished product is as big and bold as Stickles and his bandmates must have hoped, and the story bears the ring of truth, but as a songwriter, Stickles ambitions get the best of him on The Will to Live: the songs dont quite cohere into an operatic triumph as he clearly wanted, and instead this feels like a bunch of songs with an ambitious through line that doesnt make them bigger than the sum of their parts. Even if The Will to Live ultimately proves the old adage that you cant will a masterpiece into existence, whats here is the work of a great band with a fine songwriter giving their all in the studio and playing at the top of their game, and that makes it a great listen, if not quite an example of Ultimate Rock. ~ Mark Deming
Rovi