The Sheila Divine: New Parade

  2024-06-02 18:39:33

The catch-all term "emo" is one of the more ill-defined prefixes applied to rock in recent years; on paper, it implies little more than music that conveys some sort of emotion. In practice, it's applied almost as ambiguously, encompassing just about every vaguely independent-minded band with strong minor-key guitars and intense, dramatic vocals. Consequently, good guitar-based rock acts like Boston's The Sheila Divine are unfairly pigeonholed as emo right out of the box. Sure, singer Aaron Perrino delivers "rock you, yeah yeah yeah" like a life-or-death plea during "Like A Criminal," and New Parade is unapologetically awash in drama, but for the most part, it's just a hooky, remarkably consistent rock record. It helps that Perrino is a fine singer, occasionally emulating assertive frontmen from Bono on but never sacrificing his identity or considerable vocal range. The first single, "Hum," packs everything you could want in a blustery, post-Nirvana rock song—intensity, loud-quiet dynamics, a catchy, raging chorus—into two and a half compact minutes, but New Parade's remainder runs far deeper. "Automatic Buffalo," "The Amendment," and "The Modern Log" are slower, more drawn-out, and invariably elegant, while "Like A Criminal" finds The Sheila Divine doing right by ham-fisted rock. Impeccably produced and paced, New Parade is polished without being predictable, and one of the best rock records of the year, "emo" or otherwise.

See more
Excellent recommendation
Popular
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.lyricf.com All Rights Reserved