As is often the case I first saw these guys play when I had
gone to a gig to watch someone else, but that night I have to say that they
were fantastic. You only get one shot at a first impression and I definitely
liked what I heard. I have since seen them perform again and they proved that
that well-polished effort at the back end of last year was no fluke. And so it
came to pass that I am sat here with the band’s debut EP in my hot little
hands, and here is my verdict.
I am pleased to report that this is a very very good record.
There are no frills, no complications; it’s just simply a brilliant hard rock
record.
The EP kicks off with title track ‘New Road’ which provides
the perfect introduction to what this band are all about. It fires straight
into life with a big rock riff taking centre stage before the vocal hits, a
vocal that wouldn’t sound out of place fronting a lot of ‘grunge era’ bands
from the early 90’s. It’s got that forced feel to it, think parts of Nirvana ‘In
Bloom.’ (Before you get on your high horse I’m not comparing the bands just saying
that bits of the vocal style are similar)
‘Hey You’ has more of a traditional hard rock feel. The band
lists Foo Fighters as one of its influences and I think that you can definitely
hear that coming through with the more mid-tempo effort. This track also houses
a brilliant little guitar solo that shows that there is more to the band than
just big hammering bassy riffs.
Next we arrive at my favourite track, ‘Some Other Way.’ The track
opens with a riff not too dissimilar from the Arctic Monkey’s ‘Don’t Sit Down
Cause I’ve Moved Your Chair.’ Personally I think that if the band were to
release a single from this project then this song would be perfect, trust me
you hear a lot worse on rock and mainstream radio. The chorus has a simple
sing-a-long quality to it as well which definitely has the potential to get
stuck in your head.
‘Shine On Me’ is again a little bit different from what went
before it. To my rock fan trained ear there is a hint of Pearl Jam going on
here, something which is never a bad thing in opinion. The stripped back
interlude part way through is definitely something a bit different and once
again the guitar work is again first class.
The final track is ‘The Greed Effect.’ As many of you will
know there is nothing more that I love in the world than a really heavy
powerful riff and this song is just that from start to finish. It kicks off at
breakneck speed and doesn’t stop for breath, with that riff just hammering the
song forward. If you wanted a snapshot into the band and their overall sound I would
recommend getting your ears around this track, without doubt one of the
highlights of the record, and enough to ensure that you are left wanting more.
As I said above all in all this is a very good debut effort
from a band on the up. I do however have one minor criticism and that is more
on the production side, sometimes the vocal feels like it is a little too low in
the mix and gets crowded out. For me personally I like the vocal to be a bit
more prominent, but then again that might just be me. But as I say this is only
a minor niggle and doesn’t detract from what the band have achieved here, which
is a fantastic hard rock record that you really should have in your collection.
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