Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Damien Jurado - Saint Bartlett
Damien Jurado has had subtle shifts sonically in his career but everything he's released has been distinctly Damien Jurado. Saint Bartlett changes that It's not that Jurado is a complete unknown but on your indie scale he isn't one of the upper echelon in popularity. Saint Bartlett might also change that. Saint Bartlett has what Jurado discography has yet to include, Richard Swift.
Cloudy Shoes sounds more like a Fleet Foxes or Doves songs than something you'd find on a Jurado record. Arkansas has a quirky piano and a steady tom based drum beat, sounding like early Richard Swift. The album almost alternates between simple acoustic songs that have the feel of a normal Damien Jurado album and the lo-fi production Swift brings to the table. Kanas City is a pure Damien Jurado song but there's a sample that plays int he background changing the dynamics of the track, something Swift is know for. Wallingford, a straight forward rock song, sounds like it could've been taken from Jurado's I Break Chairs. There are moments that remind me of Jurado's debut, Waters Ave South.
Richard Swift has taken and enhanced what would've normally been another hauntingly beautiful record from Jurado and turned it into a lo-fi indie classic. It's a great record and Swift's production is perfect. It's a new chapter for Damien Jurado and this could be the record that makes this indie folk veteran a new favorite.
As Hell Retreats - Revival
Strike First Records is the minor league team for Facedown and with that in mind it's easy to say that Facedown's future is going to be bright. As Hell Retreats isn't a ground breaking band by any stretch of the imagination but they are playing metal in a good way.
Revival harkens back to Embodyment's Embrace the Eternal. It's not your standard death metal album and it feels wrong to call As Hell Retreats death metal. The album is only 9 songs long and clocks in at 27 minutes making it short for the genre but perhaps that's what helps the album is stand out. The songs don't become monotonous and dragging. The album leaves you wanting more. You're going to hit the play button again on your cd player. That's part of the charm with Revival. The record is just enough to get you interested and hooked without becoming bored, which could be real easy if these songs were each 6 minutes a piece. The production is done well and the drums aren't offensive or intrusive., which can be the case on metal records.
It's a solid debut from Strike First's latest band. The future of christian metal is looking alright.
Monday, May 24, 2010
To Speak of Wolves - Myself< Letting Go
I was pretty excited to hear To Speak of Wolves' Solid State debut, Myself< Letting Go. Their self released Following Voices ep was an outstanding post hardcore record. But where Following Voices was raw and interesting, Myself< Letting Go falls into the category of just being another metalcore record.
To Speak of Wolves doesn't completely fall into the rut of screaming verse, sung chorus and the lack of breakdowns keeps Myself
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Classic Album: Plankeye - The One and Only
So I've had the idea to do a classic album review and talk about my favorite records or overlooked follow up records. So every Sunday I'm going to post a classic album.
Looking back The One and Only almost plays like a transition record. It was Scott Silletta's last record with Plankeye and musically The One and Only was a set-up for where Plankeye would go with Relocation. The One and Only was a cleaner sound for Plankeye. The gritty alternative band was replaced with a clean rock sound. I had the chance to see Plankeye live twice before Relocation was released, once with Scott singing and once with Eric and the songs from The One and Only worked just as well with Eric singing them.
The One and Only kicks off with Someday, a bluesy rock song with harmonica. (The video was a great power rangers parody) I don't know how much of the change in sound on The One and Only is credited to Scott not playing guitar on the album (and perhaps not writing the songs) or how much is just a cleaner, better recording. Fall Down and One Or the Other are beautiful songs while Landmarks is a hard hitting aggressive song.
The One and Only might be Plankeye's strongest album start to finish, at least their strongest output with Scott as lead singer. Although Relocation brought minor success with Goodbye, a lot of fans couldn't get past Scott not being in the band and Relocation not being as strong as The One and Only. Although Relocation has probably stood the test of time better, The One and Only has a special place in the hearts of Plankeye fans, including mine. It was both the ending and beginning of an era.
Friday, May 21, 2010
The Meltdown
So I got the notification that I've used all my available traffic for this month, making these weeks show unavailable. So the Meltdown is going to have to be a bi-monthly podcast. But I have posted this weeks show to mediafire and you can download it and still listen.
http://www.mediafire.com/?ntjhy4vmo2q
http://www.mediafire.com/?ntjhy4vmo2q
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
A Rose By Any Other Name - One For My Master and One For My Dame
A Rose By Any Other Name is the side project of The Chariot vocalist Josh Scogin. And I'm not sure where you'd put it genre wise. It's got some mild country influence but the album is more Elliott Smith then Garth Brooks.
It's not a bad full-length. Although Scogin isn't the greatest singer you'll ever hear, his voice does take command of these songs and he sings with confidence. Josh has crafted a solid sing/songwriter effort. The album is similar to Elliott Smith, J Tillman, and Mt Eerie. It's a great little project that Scogin's been working on for a while. A nice new voice to the singer/songwriter community.
Album highlights: Unfather, God, The Devil, Me, and Monologue Replica
Hammock - Chasing After Shadows... Living With The Ghosts
I don't think it's too early to declare an album of the year. Hammock does everything right. Chasing After Shadows is perfect in every way. The album is a combination of Raising Your Voice and Maybe They Will Sing For Us Tomorrow. It's not a strict guitar and cello ambient album like Maybe They Will Sing and it's more closer musically to the songs on Kenotic and Raising Your Voice, but the soundscapes are as lush as they were on Maybe They Will Sing For Us Tomorrow. There's no band making beautiful ambient music better then Hammock. Marc Byrd, Andrew Thompson, and Matt Slocum have done it again.
The album starts with The Backward Step, a thick bass line, something we haven't heard much of from Hammock. Then the drums and guitars kick in and take you away. The song is reminiscent of Floating Away In Every Direction, only more beautiful.
Like all Hammock records, when it's over you sigh and wish there was more. The songs on Chasing After Shadows are longer, almost more focused then previous efforts. The record moves in and out of lush soundscapes, as the listener sits, meditates, and enjoys. There is no flaw on Chasing After Your Shadows, just like there's no flaw in Hammock's catalog. It's another beautiful symphony of music from one of the best bands in the world.
Monday, May 17, 2010
As I Lay Dying - The Powerless Rise
Because I absolutely loved An Ocean Between Us, it's been hard for me to review The Powerless Rise. I think I'm coming to realize that with the excepting of An Ocean Between Us, I'm not really a big As I Lay Dying fan.
And I guess where I start this review is by saying heavier isn't always better. It's not like AILD was going to write a pop record and it's not like anything before The Powerless Rise wasn't heavy, but it seems that in an attempt to create a heavier record, the whole concept of a record as a whole was overlooked. It's not that The Powerless Rise is a bad record, infact I'm sure AILD fans will love it, but it just isn't as great as An Ocean Between Us.
The first three songs, Beyond Our Suffering, Anodyne Sea, and Without Conclusion, are fast and heavy. It's a statement of what to expect. This album is fast and it's heavy. Your normal screamed verse, sung chorus that has become the As I Lay Dying standard isn't a present theme on these first 3 tracks, which is refreshing to see the band break from their mold. Plus the solos are nice and solid, some of the best I've heard from As I Laying Dying ever. But they don't grab me the same way An Ocean Between Us grabbed me.
Parallels brought my interest back into this record. The songs does sound like that AILD I'm used to but it's still continuing that whole faster, heavier sound. Parallels is a damn fine song.
But then things go back to the way the record started with The Plague. From there The Powerless Rise moves to form. The songs either carry the heavy and fast trend or they sound like your generic metalcore songs. And it's disappointing to me. An Ocean Between Us had a lot of melody and a lot of skilled song writing. There aren't songs like The Forsaken or Never Wanted on The Powerless Rise. It seems that AILD is showing more of their Living Sacrifice influence and love on this record. It's not a step back, it's just a step sideways. For fans looking for a heavier and faster As I Lay Dying, you get it. For fans hoping to see a continuation of An Ocean Between Us... this record isn't that.
Let It Ride - In Defense of a Genre
There's an influx of bands from my junior high and high school years reuniting and making me remember how awesome music used to be. But there's a small section of Christian music that has gone unappreciated and probably rightfully so. That genre is Rapcore. There aren't many people who would give a lot of props to rapcore and most credible music critics have complete disdain for rapcore as a genre and the christian market of the genre was so small and seemed so gimmicky at the time (and some of it was). But there was a lot of talent in the scene and honestly a lot of the ground Christian metal and hardcore has made the couple of years is due in large part to rapcore.
So why defend a genre that is dead? Why defend bands that doesn't exist or don't play rapcore anymore? Mostly because I've been nostalgic and my freshman skater days were spent rocking to rapcore. P.O.D., Every Day Life, Spoken, and .rod Laver were bands I loved and to an extent still really like.
P.O.D. paved the way for Christian bands in the mainstream. They were the first band to achieve real success on a large mainstream level. Back in 1994 when their debut album Snuff the Punk was released P.O.D. was a hybrid of rapping and punk. Listening to Snuff the Punk you can hear the Bad Brains influence. The record is a rough shell of what P.O.D. would become. Draw the Line was song that showcased how solid a band they could be. Snuff the Punk is full of hardcore/punk influence and in 94 rapcore wasn't a blemish on the music world yet. Brown was released in 1996 and was the album that set P.O.D. into motion. As Brown reached listeners P.O.D. became one of the biggest acts in the Christian heavy music scene. Brown helped P.O.D. catch the attention of Atlantic records. The Fundamental Elements of Southtown shot the band in superstardom. Rock the Party became the first rock video to be number 1 on MTV's Total Request Live. The band's second record on Atlantic records, Satellite, continued to gain P.O.D. success.
P.O.D.'s subsequent albums have had less fanfare and less success then Southtown and Satellite but that doesn't make them bad records. By the time Payable on Death hit stores, the genre of rapcore was wearing thin on the music community and the mainstream market was moving away from rock music in general. P.O.D. were moving in a more melodic direction. Payable On Death and Testify never really found a strong place. Both albums have great songs but it wasn't the P.O.D. of old and as albums they never seemed to take off like Satellite. A review of Testify in the Washington Post said P.O.D. hadn't moved far enough away from their rapcore roots and been able to establish a new sound enough to keep them relevant. When Angels and Serpents Dance saw the return of Marcos to the band but not a return of success. The album had more of what made P.O.D. a great band, great guitar hooks, catchy and memorable choruses but it also saw P.O.D. taking more musical chances. WHen Angels and Serpents Dance is a great mix of heavy songs and quality rock songs. It might be P.O.D.'s record of ballads but it was done well.
Every Day Life (EDL) was a band surrounded my controversy their entire career. REX record went defunct before they could release an album and by the time Alarma signed them, EDL had decided to make the angriest christian record ever. Frontman Cookerly reported that "when I got into the studio, I got upset and angry and yelled my way through it ... My goal was to write the most upset record the Christian market had ever seen, to completely alienate everybody.” Disgruntled had found itself band by christian bookstores for the cover of Whitey on the Moon, which contains the word nigga. Their second record, American Standard, picked up where Disgruntled left off. EDL was a politically charged band. Both Disgruntled and American Standard are heavy records. Carl Weaver had created a ton off great riffs. EDL was always compared to Rage Against the Machine but the first two EDL records are super heavy.
Moment of Clarity wasn't as heavy as American Standard and had more groove in the riffs but it was still EDL at the core. The album's opening song, Let It Ride, has one of the best screams to kick off a song I've ever heard. Moment of Clarity was more rock oriented but non the less interesting. Their swan song self-titled record was a cross between their early sounds the rock sound of Moment of Clarity. Cookerly was was screaming less but the riffs were heavy and moving. It might have been a more mainstream rapcore sound but by the time Every Day Life came out rapcore had run it's course and so had the trials of EDL's musical career.
Rod Laver was my favorite rapcore band. Their debut album Essence of the Game was heavy. There was no groove, nothing that really tied them to the rapcore scene musically. Essence of the Game was a metal album with rapped vocals. Essence is aggressive, angry, and just super heavy. It was really one of the records that got me into hardcore. I saw Rod Laver like 5 times live in support of Essence of the Game. Their sophomore record, Trying Not to Try, was a complete shift in sound. Rod Laver went from being a metal band that rapped, to a Rap ground with live instruments. Rudy Nielson had strong rhymes, Joey Marchiano was a solid backbone on drums, Ryan Farris was a great balance on guitar, giving interesting riffs to compliment each song, and Chris Butler on bass was creative and had bass riffs that I can only describe as Flea esque.
No Toque El Toro wasn't as tight as Trying Not to Try. Marchiano wasn't on drums and that solid time keeping wasn't there anymore. Half the songs on No Toque El Toro are really solid songs but you can hear Rod Laver trying to break free of that rapcore stereotype. There are moments where they sound like a bad parody of themselves. Signing to BEC helped Rod Laver start fresh. In A Perfect World has what worked and sounded best on No Toque El Toro. It's more groove and rock focused. The last album Rod Laver released was more of a Rudy Nielson solo record. Although Butler and Farris played on the record, The Dialogue is a strict hip-hop record with some DC go-go influence. It came across as a little bitter, with Nielson airing words of negativity towards Screaming Giants records and Essence of the Game. It was a mostly strong record but it took fans off guard and then Rod Laver disappeared forever.
Like all christian music, rapcore became over saturated in 2000. We needed more bands that sounded like P.O.D. and christian bands to keep the teens from listening to Limp Bizkit and Linkin Park. Bands like Spoken and Thousand Foot Krutch changed their sound. Project 86 and Blindside were mislabeled. Pax 217 was known only as a christian alternative to 311 and could never shake that. Rapcore became an intolerable label push and like all markets that become over saturated, it crashed. There was a lot of crap that came out of the Rapcore genre but there were a handful of bands and albums that really made a difference and were quality.
So why defend a genre that is dead? Why defend bands that doesn't exist or don't play rapcore anymore? Mostly because I've been nostalgic and my freshman skater days were spent rocking to rapcore. P.O.D., Every Day Life, Spoken, and .rod Laver were bands I loved and to an extent still really like.
P.O.D. paved the way for Christian bands in the mainstream. They were the first band to achieve real success on a large mainstream level. Back in 1994 when their debut album Snuff the Punk was released P.O.D. was a hybrid of rapping and punk. Listening to Snuff the Punk you can hear the Bad Brains influence. The record is a rough shell of what P.O.D. would become. Draw the Line was song that showcased how solid a band they could be. Snuff the Punk is full of hardcore/punk influence and in 94 rapcore wasn't a blemish on the music world yet. Brown was released in 1996 and was the album that set P.O.D. into motion. As Brown reached listeners P.O.D. became one of the biggest acts in the Christian heavy music scene. Brown helped P.O.D. catch the attention of Atlantic records. The Fundamental Elements of Southtown shot the band in superstardom. Rock the Party became the first rock video to be number 1 on MTV's Total Request Live. The band's second record on Atlantic records, Satellite, continued to gain P.O.D. success.
P.O.D.'s subsequent albums have had less fanfare and less success then Southtown and Satellite but that doesn't make them bad records. By the time Payable on Death hit stores, the genre of rapcore was wearing thin on the music community and the mainstream market was moving away from rock music in general. P.O.D. were moving in a more melodic direction. Payable On Death and Testify never really found a strong place. Both albums have great songs but it wasn't the P.O.D. of old and as albums they never seemed to take off like Satellite. A review of Testify in the Washington Post said P.O.D. hadn't moved far enough away from their rapcore roots and been able to establish a new sound enough to keep them relevant. When Angels and Serpents Dance saw the return of Marcos to the band but not a return of success. The album had more of what made P.O.D. a great band, great guitar hooks, catchy and memorable choruses but it also saw P.O.D. taking more musical chances. WHen Angels and Serpents Dance is a great mix of heavy songs and quality rock songs. It might be P.O.D.'s record of ballads but it was done well.
Every Day Life (EDL) was a band surrounded my controversy their entire career. REX record went defunct before they could release an album and by the time Alarma signed them, EDL had decided to make the angriest christian record ever. Frontman Cookerly reported that "when I got into the studio, I got upset and angry and yelled my way through it ... My goal was to write the most upset record the Christian market had ever seen, to completely alienate everybody.” Disgruntled had found itself band by christian bookstores for the cover of Whitey on the Moon, which contains the word nigga. Their second record, American Standard, picked up where Disgruntled left off. EDL was a politically charged band. Both Disgruntled and American Standard are heavy records. Carl Weaver had created a ton off great riffs. EDL was always compared to Rage Against the Machine but the first two EDL records are super heavy.
Moment of Clarity wasn't as heavy as American Standard and had more groove in the riffs but it was still EDL at the core. The album's opening song, Let It Ride, has one of the best screams to kick off a song I've ever heard. Moment of Clarity was more rock oriented but non the less interesting. Their swan song self-titled record was a cross between their early sounds the rock sound of Moment of Clarity. Cookerly was was screaming less but the riffs were heavy and moving. It might have been a more mainstream rapcore sound but by the time Every Day Life came out rapcore had run it's course and so had the trials of EDL's musical career.
Rod Laver was my favorite rapcore band. Their debut album Essence of the Game was heavy. There was no groove, nothing that really tied them to the rapcore scene musically. Essence of the Game was a metal album with rapped vocals. Essence is aggressive, angry, and just super heavy. It was really one of the records that got me into hardcore. I saw Rod Laver like 5 times live in support of Essence of the Game. Their sophomore record, Trying Not to Try, was a complete shift in sound. Rod Laver went from being a metal band that rapped, to a Rap ground with live instruments. Rudy Nielson had strong rhymes, Joey Marchiano was a solid backbone on drums, Ryan Farris was a great balance on guitar, giving interesting riffs to compliment each song, and Chris Butler on bass was creative and had bass riffs that I can only describe as Flea esque.
No Toque El Toro wasn't as tight as Trying Not to Try. Marchiano wasn't on drums and that solid time keeping wasn't there anymore. Half the songs on No Toque El Toro are really solid songs but you can hear Rod Laver trying to break free of that rapcore stereotype. There are moments where they sound like a bad parody of themselves. Signing to BEC helped Rod Laver start fresh. In A Perfect World has what worked and sounded best on No Toque El Toro. It's more groove and rock focused. The last album Rod Laver released was more of a Rudy Nielson solo record. Although Butler and Farris played on the record, The Dialogue is a strict hip-hop record with some DC go-go influence. It came across as a little bitter, with Nielson airing words of negativity towards Screaming Giants records and Essence of the Game. It was a mostly strong record but it took fans off guard and then Rod Laver disappeared forever.
Like all christian music, rapcore became over saturated in 2000. We needed more bands that sounded like P.O.D. and christian bands to keep the teens from listening to Limp Bizkit and Linkin Park. Bands like Spoken and Thousand Foot Krutch changed their sound. Project 86 and Blindside were mislabeled. Pax 217 was known only as a christian alternative to 311 and could never shake that. Rapcore became an intolerable label push and like all markets that become over saturated, it crashed. There was a lot of crap that came out of the Rapcore genre but there were a handful of bands and albums that really made a difference and were quality.
Ronnie James Dio 1942-2010 \m/
The music world and metal community lost a legend yesterday day morning as Ronnie James Dio lost his battle with stomach cancer. The rumors started Saturday night that Dio had passed but those rumors were denied but it was confirmed that Ronnie had taken a turn for the worse. But on Dio's site Sunday morning the announcement came that Ronnie had passed.
Message from Wendy Dio
Today my heart is broken, Ronnie passed away at 7:45am 16th May. Many, many friends and family were able to say their private good-byes before he peacefully passed away. Ronnie knew how much he was loved by all. We so appreciate the love and support that you have all given us. Please give us a few days of privacy to deal with this terrible loss. Please know he loved you all and his music will live on forever.
- Wendy Dio
Dio was the lead vocalist on the second best Black Sabbath record, Heaven and Hell (Paranoid is number 1 of course). After leaving Sabbath Dio released the album he's best known for, Holy Diver, which features both Holy Diver and Rainbow in the Dark. Dio is also the originator of the metal horns. Dio's swan song album was Heaven and Hell's 2009 record The Devil You Know, which is great. So put on some Dio, throw up your horns and remember Ronnie James Dio.
Message from Wendy Dio
Today my heart is broken, Ronnie passed away at 7:45am 16th May. Many, many friends and family were able to say their private good-byes before he peacefully passed away. Ronnie knew how much he was loved by all. We so appreciate the love and support that you have all given us. Please give us a few days of privacy to deal with this terrible loss. Please know he loved you all and his music will live on forever.
- Wendy Dio
Dio was the lead vocalist on the second best Black Sabbath record, Heaven and Hell (Paranoid is number 1 of course). After leaving Sabbath Dio released the album he's best known for, Holy Diver, which features both Holy Diver and Rainbow in the Dark. Dio is also the originator of the metal horns. Dio's swan song album was Heaven and Hell's 2009 record The Devil You Know, which is great. So put on some Dio, throw up your horns and remember Ronnie James Dio.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Jennifer Knapp - Letting Go
To be honest, I picked up Jennifer Knapp's latest album because of the controversy. I've never been a huge fan of her music. She's written songs I've enjoy but as a whole, her albums never clicked with me. Letting Go does. A seven year break from music seems to have done Knapp a world of good.
Letting Go is solid from start to finish. The album doesn't come off as defensive or angry aside from a handful of tracks. Inside, Better Off, and If It Made a Difference are songs where Knapp addresses the controversy of her recent admission of being a lesbian. The rest of the record are songs about a struggle between faith and earthly love and happiness and how to balance them. Letting Go is Knapp's most complete record to date.
From start to finish Letting Go is a smart and beautiful pop record. The first 4 songs on the album couldn't be better. You couldn't have asked for a better record from Knapp after her hiatus. It's a reintroduction and it's amazing.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Mike Patton - Mondo Cane
Whenever Mike Patton puts out a record you can expect 2 things. First, that it'll be a little quirky. Second, that it will be good. Mondo Cane is pop music with punk attitude. It's Patton's cover record of Italian songs, all song in Italian. It's quirky enough to be a perfect fit for Patton but it's executed so well and the record is so beautiful you forget what you're listening to at times. The line between nice pop record and punk rock classic are blurred and every song is interesting.
Songs like Che Notte! and Urlo Negro feel like something you might hear on a Gogol Bordello record, punk furry blistering through them. But most of the record hints on the simple beauty that is in each song. From soft slow violin led pieces to full orchestra pop pieces to jazzy sounding selections. Il Cielo In Una Stanza the album opener will probably ring familiar to fans of the movie Goodfellas.
It sounds more like a Sinatra style throwback record more then anything but in Mike Patton's own weird way. It's an album I'd like to find on vinyl. It's one of the most interesting albums I've heard in years.
Deftones - Diamond Eyes
Diamond Eyes is probably not the album Deftones fans were hoping for. Eros was supposed to be a return to the heavier side of the Deftones sound. But with Chi Cheng's accident, coma, and long, long road to recovery, the guys took some time off, regroup with Sergio Vega on bass and decided the best thing for the band was to start over with a brand new record. Fans hoping to hear Around the Fur part 2 will be disappointed as Diamond Eyes fits closer with the discography post White Pony.
I don't think there's a better band at being heavy and melodic then the Deftones and Diamond Eyes might be there best effort yet. The progression from Saturday Night Wrist might sound subtle but the melodies are stronger then ever before. Songs like Beauty School, Sextape and This Place is Death showcase just how good Chino and the boys are at writing quality songs. Neither is particularly heavy but all are strong songs.
Riffs on CMND/CTRL and Rocket Skates do sound like old school Stephen Carpenter riffs, throwing back to Around the Fur/White Pony. The title track, and album kick off track, Diamond Eyes sets the tone for this record perfectly. The verse riff is heavy and driving, very classic Deftones but the hook is melodic and moving. It's the picture for how the album will play out, crossing the fence of heavy and melodic all at the same time.
Diamond Eyes might be the mostly solid Deftones record from start to finish. Great production and really strong songs. It'll be interesting to hear Eros if that ever gets released but Diamond Eyes is another quality album from Chino and the boys.
Monday, May 10, 2010
The Letter Black - Hanging On By a Thread
Female fronted hard rock seems to sound all the same. Vocal abilities differ between the singers but song-writing seems to be a stagnant pool. Somewhere between Evanescence and Flyleaf is where you'll find The Letter Black. Less melodic then Evanescence but not as raw as Flyleaf.
Hanging on By a Thread picks up where Breaking the Silence left off, which is both good and bad. The best songs on Hang on by a Thread are the same songs that were on Breaking the Silence. Sarah Anthony's vocals are strong and pleasant. The songs are hard hitting and would fit on any hard rock radio station in America. Hanging On By a Thread is strong from start to finish. There's not a bad track on the album. From Fire With Fire to Wounded, Hanging On By A Thread is about as solid a debut record you'll find.
But the songwriting isn't anything to get excited about it. There's nothing groundbreaking or that interesting, which doesn't hurt the record because what The Letter Black do, they do it really well. But it doesn't get me that excited about the band. There's tons of room for growth and with Hanging On By A Thread being as solid as it is, it gives me hope that The Letter Black can continue to create quality hard rock.
The Radio Sky - The Radio Sky
It seems like a good rock record is hard to find. Just a quality 10 song, straight forward rock and roll album. The Radio Sky have produced a pretty good one. And it can be yours for free!
At times The Radio Sky's self-titled debut reminds me of Coheed and Cambria, and sometimes of Lovedrug. But both of those comparisons are based purely from a vocal perspective. We Are Pilots opens the album strong, with a good riff and great hook. It captures your attention immediately. Deja Vu Girl and Now bring the record down slightly. Going with acoustic, slower tracks following such a strong opener made it hard for me to really get into this album at first. But from Blank Stare to You Are the Passengers, the albums closer, are 8 strong rock and roll songs.
It's a strong debut from a new band and just a good rock record. The Radio Sky also features Cory Brandon from Norma Jean on guitar, making The Radio Sky another great project that Cory's involved with. You can get the album for free at http://www.myspace.com/theradiosky. Give it a listen.
Back to work
I've kind of taken the last 2 weeks off from blogging to focus on my personal music career. And after 2 weeks of being a rock star I'm ready to go back to being a critic and fan. Lots of reviews this week.
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