The Beautiful Mistake- This is Who You are
    The Beautiful Mistake
     
   
This is Who You Are

Track Listings
1 This Is Who You Are (3:52)
2 Wide Eyed and Wasted (3:47)
3 My Reminder (3:50)
4 Cold Hearts (For Tired Souls) (3:12)
5 Safe Place (2:52)
6 Separation (3:23)
7 Great Divorce (3:37)
8 Walking Wounded (2:35)
9 Friendly Committee (2:07)
10 Cold Hands (For Tired Hearts) (10:34)


Discography
This is Who You Are (2004)
Light a Match, For I Deserve to Burn (2002)
Beautiful Mistake (2002)



  Grace Hotel
  Overall rating: 

 

 

Album Reviews

It's impossible to open any major music publication these days without the word "emo" staring you down. Like grunge before it, the emo virus has spread through the ranks of the major labels as countless bands are being signed, hyped, marketed and forgotten about. Instead of getting stronger however, the music has gotten weaker as each band emulates the last hot group to come before, creating a watered down, generic sound that has critics like myself rolling our eyes at the first sound of power chords and anguished vocals.

Enter the Beautiful Mistake. Their debut Light a Match for I Deserve to Burn, was an immediate success for the band and became the Militia Group's top-selling album. Now two years later, the band returns with their sophomore effort, This Is Who You Are. Teaming with producer Michael Rosen (AFI, The Donnas, Rancid), the result is an emo album that is surprisingly refreshing. Rosen's production work is subtle yet effective, creating an album that stands out from the rest of emo pack.

Along with Rosen, much of the credit must be given to guitarists Josh Haquist and Shawn Grover. Refusing to rely on a paint-by-numbers emo sound, they nicely offer up creative breakdowns and understated time changes. Together their guitar work is well thought out and nicely contrasts. Haquist also takes on lead vocal duties, and instead of a tormented howl, offers a confident, strong voice that is more akin to angrier Rob Thomas (Matchbox 20) or Stephan Jenkins (Third Eye Blind).

From the opening cut and title track, the Beautiful Mistake show they aren't willing to take the easy way out. The first third of this song seems to be a familiar trip down Emo Lane, with cascading verses and choruses, until the final third offers truly breathtaking and emotionally potent turn, segueing into a nice reprise of the chorus. "The Separation" moves into a swelling chorus that upends the standard emo verse that comes before and finds some a truly chilling lead guitar line nicely counteracting Haquist's swelling vocals. "Cold Hearts (For Tired Souls)" -- one of the best tracks on This Is Who You Are -- nicely mixes standard power punk, hardcore and even some keyboard embellishments creating on a knockout of a song. The latter part of the album lapses into more standard emo territory, though the band does show flashes of creative life, but it never fully settles into the sound that Deep Elm records has become so synonymous with.

This Is Who You Are certainly isn't for everybody. If the very idea of listening to yet another young emo band fills you with dread, the Beautiful Mistake aren't going to change your mind. What this album does show above all is a band with promise. If anything, This Is Who You Are shows a band unwilling to settle within the familiar confines of their genre and there are flashes that are willing to embrace the studio process even more. Do we have the next Radiohead on our hands? Not likely, but the Beautiful Mistake show the promise of a Diary-era Sunny Day Real Estate.

The Beautiful Mistake won't convert the emo unbelievers, but fans of the genre looking for something with a little more substance than the standard emo fare will find much to love in This Is Who You Are.

~ Kevin Jagernauth

 

Initially, I didn’t know how to classify this disc, which is odd because this isn’t an off-the-wall weird band or anything like that. They’re an emo band, nothing less and nothing more. The thing is, though, they don’t sound quite like all the rest of the emo that’s crowding the cd shelves. Instead of making me feel depressed, which seems to be the goal of most emo discs, this cd has more of a bittersweet feel to it.

“Our dreams may bleed, but the wounds will heal”—one of the lyrics from the song “Cold Hearts (for Tired Souls)” seems to sum up the feel of the entire cd, things will hurt, but not forever. Usually bands get stuck talking about how things hurt but forget there are good things that happen too. Music is meant to be an emotional experience, but most of what I hear blaring from every Clear Channel sponsored radio station has lost all emotional content. Rarely do I hear songs that seem to actually convey or touch upon emotions. The Beautiful Mistake actually manage to illicit emotions in me, and not just the negative ones associated with the genre. They also pull this off in only 37 minutes spread over 10 songs. True, that is somewhat short, but I’d rather have a good but somewhat short cd than a bland and lengthy disc.

The music that The Beautiful Mistake plays is of the emo genre, as I said before. The songs are all in the 3 minute long range (except for the 8 minute finale). Most of them are mid-tempo with bursts of almost-punk speed, but these are slightly rare. Throughout the disc, the one drawback I noticed is that the songs may seem to meld together since there isn’t a terribly huge amount of variation throughout the runtime of the cd. Also, the album starts off with its best song, the title track, so as the cd goes on you keep hoping it’ll get as good as it started. There are often points that come close to matching the beauty of the title track, but it doesn’t quite get there. As for the vocals, they are a melodic tenor, and they flow nicely over the music. In one song there are a couple of background screams which makes me wonder if there’s going to be screamo in this band’s future. I really hope not because they have a great grasp of the emo genre, although I wouldn’t be opposed to them expanding some on their sound.

*3.5/5* -- This cd is a great emo disc, but they’re entering an already over-saturated genre that I think will have a hard time supporting even more new bands.

~ Rick Gebhardt

  

Building from their success of their retardedly titled, but solid debut Light A Match For I Deserve To Burn (Marketing Director: “So this is really the album title?” Band: “Uh, yeah…” Marketing Director: “Hellooooooooo emo kids!”), The Beautiful Mistake return with an equally solid, equally average followup.

So what’s happened since the last record? Well, they've bought a slew of effects pedals, and they've been listening to a lot of Failure and Hum. I mean…a lot. I'll put it this way: in the liner notes they give thanks to a bunch of bands for "Friendship and Influence", the last four listed being Failure, Catherine Wheel, Elvis, and U2, all of whose influence shows up distinctly on the record (okay, maybe not Elvis, but you're getting the picture).

Asides from some muted hootin' and hollerin' in "Cold Hearts (For Tired Souls)" and some at the end of "A Safe Place" (which, for the record, is not as good as the demo version that initially appeared on the most recent Plea For Peace comp), there is virtually no more screaming on this ship anymore. What they have managed to do is craft a consistent, more spacey, rock leaning record. While the hooks are not that apparent, they really come out in repeated listenings. Songs like the title track and the first single (whose video is included on the CD. Well shot, but kinda lame…I seriously recommend checking out the video for “On Building” from their last record…that was brilliant) and the Snapcase-esque “A Friendly Committee” are extremely catchy tunes. “Wide and Wasted” and “Walking Wounded” mine from the Failure catalogue like nobody’s business. So much so that I keep waiting for Ken Andrews to start singing somewhere, even the lead guitar lines are extremely Failure-like. Honestly, the only reason I’m letting this go is a) they’re one of the better Failure rip off bands, and b) I really miss Failure. Nothing spectacular or original, yet it really seems like the guys spent a lot of time crafting these songs, adding different layers of atmospherics and textures to their sound. Plus the artwork, like on the debut album, is ridiculously good.

Overall, the record goes from average to good at times. Not that amazing, but it's ok. Looks like Cave-In's got some competition in the "wannabe-Failure" category now.

~ Goodness

 

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