Justifide has plenty of catchy
tunes and some smashing hits, but just don't expect this
album to go deeper than that.
Justifide have moved beyond the
toybox and are now exploring The Beauty Of The Unknown.
Though this album has passionate vocals and enjoyable
melodies, the flow of guitars lacks punctuating punch,
definition and dynamic that you expect from a good
alternative rock album. Lyrically, Justifide has some
great ideas, but doesn't always execute them to their
full potential. And most importantly, this album is a
stylistic mess, changing from hard rock to alternative
rock to pop, sometimes within the same song.
Take the first track, 'Face To
Face.' The 50-second artsy intro is a cheap promise
because once the raging guitars start for the verse, they
don't fluctuate to accentuate the melodic chorus. As with
most rock bands that lean to the hard rock style, the
lyrics aren't developed with interest beyond the chorus
statement. It's a catchy song, but it could be an
excellent song with some quality mixing and production.
The second track 'As It Feels Good' starts slower and
softer, and then breaks into alternative rock rhythms. A
short three-minute track, it's disappointing since the
lyrics are repetitive and the slower intro serves no
purpose to the song - since it doesn't return, it feels
separate from the rest of the track. About a broken
relationship, this song talks about the experience but
doesn't offer a conclusion: 'Love hurts as bad as it
feels good / As it feels good / As it feels good... And
I'm waiting for you no more / And I'm waiting for you no
more...'
The third track 'Pointing
Fingers' is notable as it successfully combines very
strong alternative rock with hard rock and
alternative-rap elements. This makes it one of the best
tracks on this disc, with spine-tingling intensity
throughout. The chorus and the bridge have a beautiful
melody, and though the bridge builds to a climax, more
dynamic in the chorus instrumentation would have made
this track perfect: 'Cause I don't care / What you think
of me / I don't care / And I don't care / My Father, he
knows me well.' Coming to track four, 'To Live,'
Justifide provides a thoughtful, encouraging message, but
the instrumentation and the melody are boring: 'So reach
up and take His hand and see Him / Change your life
around / That's all I want for you is to live / To
actually live.'
The only thing that's
interesting about 'Save This Fakeness' is the 15-second
intro and the 35-second bridge, which are both really
cool musically. If only the rest of the track lived up to
this standard. The following track 'Escape' ought to
remind you of ex-Sparrow band Earthsuit. 'Someone To
Blame' starts with a slow, Radiohead-esque 60-second
intro before breaking into hard rock. Once again, the
rock is boring but the intro had potential. The closing
quartet of songs are relationship songs all in different
styles. 'Goodbye Without You' starts steady and anthemic
with strings, acoustic guitars and pop rhythms, and then
moves into a rock style. 'Anymore' rocks from the start,
but is the least enjoyable track on this disc. Its only
redeeming quality is the electric guitar bridge. 'I
Wouldn't Know' has an almost annoying funky pop style and
is something you would expect from a boy-band album. The
closing track 'This Song's For You' finishes this album
quietly and without interest (not to mention the
out-of-tune vocals). As always, it seems like Justifide
has several ideas and can't focus them into one song. If
this song had been called 'One More Time' or 'Tonight,'
it might have been more interesting.
If you're an average rock fan,
there's no reason not to enjoy this album. Justifide has
plenty of catchy tunes and some smashing hits, but just
don't expect this album to go deeper than that. If you're
interested in the numbers, there's only two tracks on
this album that barely pass the four minute mark, which
makes this 11-track album under 40 minutes total.