Justifide
     
   
The Beauty of the Unknown

Track Listings
1 Face to Face (4:20)
2 As It Feels Good (3:17)
3 Pointing Fingers (3:51)
4 To Live (4:02)
5 Save This Fakeness (3:10)
6 Escape (3:21)
7 Someone to Blame (4:12)
8 Goodbye Without You (3:35)
9 Anymore (2:45)
10 I Wouldn't Know (3:52)
11 This Song's for You (2:53)


Discography
The Beauty of the Unknown  (2002)
Life Outside The Toybox (2001)



 

  Grace Hotel
  Overall rating: +++-

 

 

Album Reviews

This is the second release from the trio Justifide. Their sound is fairly unique but could be described as a mix of Pax 217, 12 stones, and maybe a bit of Chevelle. They have fairly strong lyrics and it seems like they have been through some tough times.

The styles on this album are fairly varied. The cd opens up with Face to Face, a rapcore/rock track. Farther up on the disc is the song Anymore which has an almost punk sound to it at times. I Wouldn´t Know has almost a jazz sound with a organ sound filling in the background. Rounding out the styles is the accoustic This Song´s For You. The variety here makes it easy to listen to this album without it being too repetative too quick. The vocals are pretty decent and varied as well ranging from melodic to screams. This is a fairly solid album on the music side of things. That said, it doesn´t stand out as a stellar performance either.

Lyrics-wise this album is very good. The song Pointing Fingers talks about people needing to quite pointing out each others faults and differences and to get along. To Live is a song written to one of their friends who they want to come to know Jesus but, the person has to choose Life. Escape talks about God being our refuge from the this world that we live in.

I´ve had a good time listening to this album the last few days. I think it´ll be one that I come back to every now and then to listen to. Have a listen to it and see if it´s your style.

~ Dan Klassen

 

 

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.

~ praize.com

  

 

 

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