It’s been a long three years for the band since releasing 2010’s What Separates Me From You, and after finally re-emerging victoriously from their high-profile lawsuit with Victory Records just this month, now is certainly not the time to drop a dance-pop record or space-rock opera on arenas full of pent-up ADTR fans ready to get their slam on. Common Courtesy, their fifth full-length, is a classic ADTR record in every sense—from the riffs to the lyrical content—tracked and tweaked on a level befitting the band’s current hugeness. But it’s the kind of release that will divide listeners squarely down the middle: You can easily both condemn the record for being formulaic, or praise it for staying true to the band’s clearly defined sound. It’s really all a matter of how you look at it.However on Courtesy, it’s the pop-punk material that wins, providing the most memorable moments on the record, like opening cut “City Of Ocala,” with its warm tribute to the band’s hometown, the likeable hard-working moxie of “Right Back At It Again,” or the nostalgic road anthem “I Remember” that closes the album, with singer Jeremy McKinnon lyrically recalling the days of sleeping in vans and playing empty rooms. (Those days are definitely gone.)The other huge part of the ADTR equation, of course, is the heavy stuff, and Common Courtesy delivers on this front too, without breaking much new sonic ground.