Artist: Every Avenue
Album: Picture Perfect
Label: Fearless Records
Purchase: iTunes
Release Date: November 3rd, 2009
Overall: 8.5
Music: 8.0
Lyrics: 8.0
Production: 8.5
A little more than a year ago, Ever Avenue began turning heads with their debut album Shh…Just Go With It. Their standard pop-punk fare was super sweet and sugary with hooks, but couldn’t seem to hold fans over for very long leaving people craving more after a brief sugar high. Now they are back with their second album Picture Perfect, looking to shake things up and turn the volume up higher than ever.
It seems that with time Every Avenue have grown tired of the same old, same old pop punk format and are looking to switch it up this time around. Some songs still have the same charm as their debut (“Mindset”, “Saying Goodbye”), but for the most part they are making their own way in the scene and defining themselves as more than that. Songs like “Girl Like That” with it’s swirling piano, and the heavier influences of a song like the title track”Picture Perfect” give Every Avenue more character and a stronger presence with this album.
The tone of Picture Perfect is much different than their debut as well, where the latter had a more positive tone of better days and summertime, this album dances around the opposite. “Tell Me I’m A Wreck” and “Finish What You Started” both are a little somber with their lyrics, but deliver with catchy hooks and bursting choruses that are becoming the band’s trademark.
Overall it’s a great feeling to listen to a band that sounds as though they have found themselves, and that’s the case with Every Avenue. Picture Perfect is a great sophomore effort that isn’t just another pop punk release, even the cliche ballad “The Story Left Untold” doesn’t feel trite and over done like most others. This band has a winning release that will provide them with enough notoriety that picture perfect won’t be an ironic jab at their lives (given the cover), but rather reality for a band that deserves their time to shine.
Sue says
I agree this band deserves to shine, only for the years they played with shitty bands in Port Huron. But, if they did find themselves, they are not original enough. Overall they have become too repetitive and predictable in their song structure and lyrics. Not to be mean, but I don’t know anyone over 17 that might listen to this, or either a super Pop-punk lover that doesn’t really concern themselves with expanding a song into a song, rather than building and elongating a 20 second chorus line into two or three minutes.
“catchy hooks and bursting choruses that are becoming the band’s trademark.” – How is that a trademark? The majority of one-hit wonders are nothing but that, there are a tun of mainstream crap that is nothing but that. Trademark to their style of pop, perhaps.