Album mourns loss of the middle class



FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Goo Goo Dolls front man Johnny Rzeznik, who grew up in working-class Buffalo, N.Y., went home to gain inspiration for the band's most current album, "Let Love In."
While there, he saw the disparity between the haves and have-nots. He drove out to the old factories and saw that buildings had vanished and were replaced by fences with barbed wire. It made him question lots of things: What happened to these people; who's protecting humanity; and most of all, how can the United States survive without a middle class?
This inspired the song "When You're Gone," and his eye-opening experience back in Buffalo guided much of the album's content.
"I started to feel helpless and hopeless and numb -- as a human being," Rzeznik said between stops on the "Let Love In" promotional tour. "I wanted the theme for this album to be hope. When you get older, you have to make a conscious decision -- especially as a man -- to be brave enough to feel and allow people to love you."
But the song on "Let Love In" that has kept the Goo Goo Dolls relevant and part of the zeitgeist is "Better Days," which was picked up by both CNN and Oprah Winfrey almost as an anthem after Hurricane Katrina.
The Goo Goo Dolls perform with Counting Crows at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Post Gazette Pavilion, Pittsburgh. Tickets through Ticketmaster outlets.
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