Transgender Dysphoria Blues


Transgender Dysphoria Blues is the sixth studio album by American punk rock band Against Me!, released on January 21, 2014 by Total Treble Music and Xtra Mile Recordings. The album deals with gender dysphoria, following Laura Jane Grace's gender transition and coming out.

Recording and production

The band Against Me! first announced work on a new album in November 2011. The first sessions for the album were a false start, where the band started recording some basic tracks and then went on tour, and decided to scrap and start over when they got back from tour. Then, the record was completely recorded except for vocals when drummer Jay Weinberg quit the band. The band first tried to have fill-in drummer Atom Willard record drum tracks to match the previously recorded tracks, but it wasn't working. Starting from scratch, the band began recording the album a final time at Studio 606 in February 2013. In May 2013, long-time bassist Andrew Seward also left the band. A month later, Fat Mike of NOFX joined the band in the studio, playing on three songs, two of which appear on the album. That same month, tracking for the album was completed.

Commercial performance

The album debuted on the Billboard 200 at No. 23, their highest debut yet on the chart. It also debuted at No. 6 on the Top Rock Albums chart, with 10,000 copies sold in its first week. It has sold 45,000 copies in the United States as of August 2016.

Critical reception

In his review for Now Magazine, Joshua Kloke described the record as having "career-defining clarity" and "increased confidence," writing that lead singer Laura Jane Grace "looks inward and employs conviction unheard since their 2002 debut, Reinventing Axl Rose." Will Hermes of Rolling Stone rated the album three-and-a-half stars out of five, and called it "A series of bracing songs about a self-destructive girl in a boy's body, it's a thematic offspring of Lou Reed ", and noted how "it takes balls to come out this way, in this genre" wishing Grace "God-speed, sister." Also, Hermes said that the album musically "sticks to the band's established brand of warrior-cry punk metal", and this "limits the range of what might be an ever braver new world, one glimpsed on the softer acoustic 'Two Coffins.'" Dan Weiss of Spin called the album "one of the most fascinating records of the year," rating it eight out of ten.
In 2019, Loudwire ranked the album 23 in their "66 best rock albums of the decade."

Accolades

Year-end rankings
PublicationRankList
American Songwriter20Top 50 Albums of 2014
Consequence of Sound6Top 50 Albums of 2014
Noisey2Top 25 Albums of 2014
PopMatters6The 80 Best Albums of 2014
Rolling Stone1550 Best Albums of 2014
Spin1450 Best Albums of 2014
Stereogum14The 50 Best Albums of 2014
TIME7Top 10 Best Albums of 2014
The Village Voice10Pazz+Jop Albums of 2014
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Decade-end rankings
PublicationRankList
Billboard90100 Best Albums of the 2010s
BrooklynVegan11100 Best Punk & Emo Albums of the 2010s
BrooklynVegan29141 Best Albums of the 2010s
Cleveland.com76100 Greatest Albums of the 2010s
Consequence of Sound22The 100 Top Albums of the 2010s
Kerrang!5The 75 Best Albums Of The 2010s
Loudwire23The 66 Best Rock Albums of the 2010s
Paste4The 40 Best Punk Albums of the 2010s
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Personnel

Band

Additional musicians

Production and design