Falling Up has teamed up with Tedd T, Aaron Sprinkle, Trevor McNevan, Toby Mac and others to produce a remix record of all their hits from Crashings and Dawn Escapes. Preorder the album, Exit Lights, here before it hits stores on September 12th.
Forever Changed – Chapters
Artist: Forever Changed
Album: Chapters
Label: Floodgate
Purchase: Amazon
Release Date: May 23, 2006
Overall: 9.0
Music: 9.2
Lyrics: 8.6
Production: 8.8
It nearly killed me to write this review. Caught in a dichotomy between overwhelming hope and fathomless sadness, I thought Chapters would be the end of me. Even before hearing the first chords of the title track, I knew this would be the last Forever Changed album Iâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢d ever review, and that knowledge had a profound effect on how I was listening to the songs. I didn’t think being objective was a possibility, until I realized it never could be, not with this band. As someone under the gun of years of Forever Changed affection, I was expecting Chapters to be the precedent farewell album–bittersweet ballads and a commemorative collection of all the good years. Instead, what I received was a heart attack of hope. In places where I was anticipating closure, I found more door openings, and that irony is the sort of paradox that has always personified my relationship with Forever Changed.
If fans are expecting another polished, foot-tapper like The Need To Feel Alive, they are sorely mistaken. Chapters is as progressive and experimental as its title suggests. Consider how Forever Changed’s music has always built on its stability, and now progressive has a new meaning. Gone are the formulaic, homophonic approaches, and in its place a heightened level of musicianship that captures the raw atmosphere of a live performance and the understanding that instruments can stand alone even while playing together.
For the first time in a Forever Changed release an instrumental intro greets the listener in muted keyboard fashion. Soon, Nathan’s drumming kicks in like an army recruitment beat. Being a Christian band, Forever Changed waste no time in making this evident as “Never Look Down” is a ministry outreach if there ever was. Even with a gorgeous guitar solo and piano bridge catapulting the track into gear, listener may still wonder what happened to the slick production that once permeated the Forever Changed sound. I will remark on the non-James-Paul-Wisner-ness of this record. Produced by Moments In Graceâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢s Jeremy Griffith, youâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢ll key into his â┚¬Ã…”ambience is everythingâ┚¬? style by the third track. Where The Need To Feel Alive thrived on its cavity-inducing sugar coat, Chapters is like a much needed drink, comforting in an entirely different way.
Take for example “All I Need” with its sonic-pop introduction and laidback bass tags. I’ve never heard that kind of spacey feel to a Forever Changed song before. However, once it settles in, I find it fitting nicely, especially as a post-chorus transition. This leads me to what could easily be Forever Changed’s most singable song EVER. What can I say about “Runaway” that isn’t captured in the moment of me singing “You just runaway” at 9 o’clock on a Saturday morning while serving breakfast in my school’s cafeteria? At the risk of sounding completely absurd after that remark, I swear to you, “Runaway” is the kind of tune you walk away whistling. Your inner beatbox will play out the sizzling guitar riffs and choral harmonies on their own accord once you get started. And Iâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢m speaking from experience here.
Contrary to its title, “The Disconnect,” is assembled solidly. With Nathan’s drumming striding in a tight, controlled rhythm, tempo changes are as seamless as Ben’s intricate guitar work. “It’s Too Late,” on the other hand, is Dan’s jam. Behind the keys, he administers his own flavor of poison, while vocally hitting notes that could melt the iceberg that sank the Titanic. That iceberg is massive, but it’s not at colossal as “No Way Out.” I have major beef with this song. I don’t understand how I’m supposed to say goodbye to a band when they write choruses as painfully heartening as “No way out, are you running out of dreams. No way out, are you learning how to need,” and then have what sounds like an entire church choir sing its strains as a closing melody. It sent chills down my spine.
“Cradle Eyes” is like a child’s lullaby–mellow, moving, and humble. Its unadorned piano melody and acoustic whispering really remind you of what it feels like to be human, to be part of a connection in a network of infinity. Dan’s voice is the perfect combination of primal emotion and jaded honesty, so as not to make this the proverbial ballad. Despite its quietness, its silences speak volumes. However, you won’t go away from this record feeling small because “Letting Go Of You” promises to unleash a monolith of hope. Slowing building into a tidal wave of ambient swirls, vocal color, and lyrical triumph, the listener is besieged with reasons to keep faith in the toughest of times.
Chapters is not an album that will immediately wrest your ears to attention like The Need To Feel Alive. But what it lacks in pop, it makes up in power. They say accessible is overrated, and I tend to waver in the opposition. However, if it is possible to tame the accessible without compromising the appeal, I’m all for the direction change. With multiple listens, the beauty in Chapters comes into fruition, and in the case of Forever Changed, beauty is never one thing. The lyrics, the inspiration, the passion, the melodies, and most importantly the soul are what radiate life into Chapters.
Go get this album. Go to a farewell show. Order it online. Whatever you do, don’t miss out on your chance to be Forever Changed.
Track Listing:
01 Chapters
02 Never Look Down
03 Starting To Sink
04 All I Need
05 Runaway
06 Time Will Change
07 The Disconnect
08 It’s Too Late
09 Refusal
10 No Way Out
11 Cradle Eyes
12 Letting Go Of You
Standout Tracks:
“Runaway,” “The Disconnect,” “No Way Out,” “Letting Go Of You”
Damone – Out Here All Night
Artist: Damone
Album: Out Here All Night
Label: Island / Def Jam
Purchase: iTunes
Release Date: March 21, 2006
Overall: 8.9
Music: 9.0
Lyrics: 8.6
Production: 9.0
Despite all the regally named artists on Island/Def Jam’s roster, the label has been pulling a bullheaded move in failing to properly publicize what could easily be one of their best signed bands. The Boston based rock & rollers released an EP in October of last year to surprisingly little fanfare. This may be from the band’s less-than-stellar 2003 RCA debut From The Attic, but believe me when I say today Damone is a much better band. With their new LP Out Here All Night hitting the Itunes music store two full months before shelving, the band are making a bold statement about the shape of their new sound. Maybe this is Island’s lame way of “testing” out the record on the music community, or maybe Damone just got fed up with the label’s apathetic marketing strategy and took matters into their own hands being anxious get their CD out, either way this means a huge cash-in on the part of Damone fans: new music for the head and the heart.
Named after a character from the 1982 flick “Fast Times at Ridgemont High,” Damone are Noelle, Mike, Dustin, and Vazquez shredding out their edgy brand of melodic metallic rock. Leader singer and guitarist Noelle is the era’s new Joan Jett, less punk and more rock and roll, but a definitive riotgrrl nonetheless. Trading in her punk strain for a straightforward rock tone, Noelle has become the unique element to Damone’s sound, turning what could easily be another male-fronted 80’s hair metal rip-off into a snarling, pop-rooted youth manifesto. The band’s 3:1 male to female ratio works in their favor as what they forego in testosterone vocals, they make up in sizzling, tectonic musicianship.
Behind the kit Dustin Hengst is a drumming machine, regulating the beat in an easygoing canter. Like a seasoned veteran, Hengst knows his place in the band and sticks to it by ornamenting his beats to enhance the band’s dynamic rather than steal the spotlight with tasteless breakdowns. Likewise, Vazquez’s bass parts seal in the quartet’s rhythm section, humming along as the core infrastructure to which Damone’s guitar-driven sound can grow. If I haven’t already made it clear, Out Here All Night is a rock & roll effort if there ever was. Testament to this are songs like “Now Is The Time”, “Get Up And Go,” “Outta My Way,” “What We Came Here For,” and the album’s title track, where Mike’s blistering Van Halen styled-guitar riffs and melodies emblazon the music.
However, before I jump the gun, Out Here All Night does find itself making some lackluster missteps, mostly in the form of slower acoustic ballads like “Wasted Years” that clash with the band’s innate energy. On that same note, punk tunes reminiscent of From The Attic such as “Tonight” somehow fall flat in the face of Damone’s new metal-rock sound. That is not to say these type of songs don’t have an audience. When the mood is right, the dreamy allure of “When You Live” is a heavy-hearted masterpiece of lyrical substance. With Noelle’s voice taking on an innocent, hopeful quality, the track hits home in a way frenzied guitar work never could.
So forget about 2003’s From The Attic or least view it as an axis before enlightenment because Damone deserve to be heard. The way I see it, everyone has three options after reading this review. Buy the Itunes release of Out Here All Night now, wait two months to get a hardcopy at your record store, or in the very least stream a track on purevolume or myspace. Not listening is just simply not an option.
Track Listing:
1. Now Is The Time
2. Out Here All Night
3. What We Came Here For
4. Stabbed In The Heart
5. On Your Speakers
6. Get Up And Go
7. Outta My Way
8. Youâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢re The One
9. New Change Of Heart
10. When You Live
11. Tonight
12. Wasted Years
Standout Tracks:
“Now Is The Time”, “Out Here All Night”, “Get Up And Go”, “New Change Of Heart”, “When You Live”
Woodale – Finish What You Start
Artist: Woodale
Album: Hotel
Label: Unsigned
Purchase: Woodale Merch
Release Date: February 12, 2006
Overall: 8.0
Music: 8.3
Lyrics: 7.7
Production: 8.0
Pop rock is the new in vogue, but you don’t have to tell Floridaâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢s Woodale that. With a streamlined harmony-driven sound via Waking Ashland meets The Fold, their tight melodies and choral-styled love verses could warm even the most cynical of hearts. If teenaged girls aren’t already eating this stuff up, come six months Woodale will be a household name. The bandâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢s five song EP, Finish What You Start, is the year’s new I Am For You, meaning now is the time to jump on the bandwagon.
Initially guitar-oriented, tracks soon fall away into more mellow instrumentationâ┚¬Ã¢â‚¬bright keyboard melodies, warm piano cadences, and plodding bass lines. These elements help to craft the background of the EPâ┚¬Ã¢”ž¢s true selling point: its vocals. While the lyrics never delve past the romantic clichés of young love, frontman Matt Wilbur executes these lines with such palpable emotion that the affect lies in the delivery rather than the prose complexity. Meanwhile, simple harmonies and layered choruses fill out the remaining Woodale sound, making for a very subtle, yet lavish experience. The opening track â┚¬Ã…”Hereâ┚¬? is prime example of the kind of pop-accessible audience Woodale appeals to.
Albeit two solid starting tunes, Finish What You Start, does come off as a slightly flavorless effort. The hooks are abound, but the formula has been pulled off too many times to do justice for Woodale’s talents. When they release a full length down the line, I expect it to be a much more sophisticated album, one that boasts an identity that is uniquely Woodale. Collectively, the group already has all the elements of a great band; they just need to work on nurturing a trademark sound. Still, at 3 bucks a pop at the Woodale merch store, Finish What You Start is a steal considering its stellar musicianship and elegant pop sensibilities.
Track Listing:
1. Here
2. Listen For Me
3. She’s Got A Way
4. Baby, I Can’t Wait
5. Keep Driving
Standout Tracks:
“Here”, “Listen For Me”