Yeah, Me Too is
Gaunt at their independent peak. It was the next-to-last release before the band signed with a major label and subsequently broke up -- after recording the uncharacteristically aimless
Bricks and Blackouts for Warner Bros.. Still enough connected to their punk attitude to have it infused into their recordings,
Gaunt did more than simply maintain the correct tempo, they flailed at their instruments on
Yeah, Me Too, adding generous amounts of sweat and believability to their pop-punk. Standout tracks include the punchy "Just Leave" and "Now," with its urgent chorus, but all of the material is of a similar fine quality. Far from being an important, or really even notable '90s punk outfit,
Gaunt at least seemed to believe in their music and themselves. This honesty and strong sense of direction is distinctly evident on
Yeah, Me Too, perhaps the band's finest album. ~ Vincent Jeffries