Showing posts with label album review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label album review. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Forever Halloween: A Review

I haven't written an actual, legitimate album review before. I have never really felt the need to. It's usually just a quick "hey this is fantastic go buy it you can thank me later here is a list of other artists they sort of sound like" at the end of another post, but I couldn't stop myself from writing a sort-of-review for The Maine's new album, Forever Halloween.

The new album feels very personal. It threw me off at first, because I try not to snoop on a band's personal life. If they want me to know something personal, they'll let me know some how. This is their way of doing that. I was really worried. I knew before I ever got the album in my hands that it would be personal from reading various interviews the group has done recently. Shedding your skin, being personal with your audience can backfire, and it really worried me. After their last album, Pioneer, broke free how could anything else compare? It's kind of like thinking you know someone and the one day they break down this wall that you had felt but never seen and you see this other side of them.

Official Website
Check below for an interview, where to buy, and tour dates!

It will put a lot of people off, but it will also bring in a lot of new people. There isn't a single song that didn't hit me in the feels. The song "Fucked Up Kids" struck me more than the others. It describes me so perfectly, and no other song by any other artist has ever done that.
Even if you don't connect with the lyrics, the melodies, drum beats, and guitar riffs will snag you and drag you down into the depths. The last full minute of the album's title track had me with my hands in the air like I was praising Jesus in a holy roller, Southern baptist church.

Of course it's being compared to their previous albums and I'm not the only one who was concerned. Many fans have said it's good but it just didn't WOW them like Pioneer and some feel like The Maine has reverted back to their Black & White days. I beg to differ.


  • First, no other album will WOW you like Pioneer did. They will never be in that situation again. It got a lot of attention because they had just broken away from their record label, it was their first album that was really on their own, and people were curious. That situation fueled a lot of the angst behind the album and helped prove it's place in the rock world. This album WOWs in other ways (this album was recorded live, on tape. No one does that anymore, WHY ARE YOU NOT IN AWE?!).
  • Second, this isn't the power pop record Black & White felt like. This album puts out a distinct vibe, not unlike their other songs but different enough to know they're growing up. It feels very...alternative? I could feel influences like Ryan Adams and Brenden Benson (who helped with the recording process) flow through.
But in order for some people to love it, other must hate it and the criticism will tumble forth from the interwebs. But most of all, The Maine seems happy with this album. They seem happy with and proud of what they have produced, and that's something to pay attention to. That's like dumping the whole jar of rainbow sprinkles on my ice cream cake. 

It shows that they're still growing and that's the best thing of an artist. Maybe they don't quite know who they are yet, but that isn't something to hold against them. I have yet to meet a single person, of any age, who knows who they are. I've met a lot of pretenders, but never someone who could, at the end of the day, say who they were with confidence. They are human and this record shows us that. 

They have delivered unto us a record worth our money, our pleasure, and our soul. 
The Maine has done an incredible job and, personally, I can't thank them enough for this album. 





Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Nick Cave Pushes The Sky


I found Nick back in my freshman year of college, through Harry Potter no less. His song O’ Children was featured in the seventh installment (part one) of the ten-year series and, me being the person that I am, I Googled all the lyrics I could remember. So I bought the song. And then I found Spotify and listened to every single album Cave and the Seeds put out.


 I was obsessed passionate.

Fast forward a few years, and Nick Cave releases his 15th studio album, Push The Sky Away. The whole album is a bit like a bad trip. It’s dark and a bit depressing, but the inflection Cave puts into each song when he sings literally paints the song into a story before your very eye/brain. Each song, on its lonesome, is fantastic. Songs tell stories and each of these nine songs does just that. But when you put them together, the album tells an even greater story. Cave has left little to prove.  Instead of describing each song and (unfairly) comparing this album to his previous ones or to some obscure musician you don’t care about, I’m going to tell you to go listen to it. Then I’m going to tell you to go buy it.


Believe me, it’s good. 

credit