Posts tagged regret

Who: Daylight

Song: Damp

Why This Rocks: Fans of drab yet fantastically dark rock and roll need to pay attention here, you’ve gotta meet Daylight. There are a couple indications on Daylight’s newest release, The Difference In Good And Bad Dreams, that the band are moving forward from their deeply depressing, Small Brown Bike-indebted sound of yore. One is when they harmonize on opener “On The Way To Dad’s” that they’re “sick of writing songs about killing myself,” subject matter they did seem to heavily dwell on with prior EPs. The other is “Damp,” which starts like Jawbreaker’s “Ashtray Monument” at half-speed and then lays on mid-’90s alternative crunch and stomp in the key of Quicksand and Nirvana.  Daylight are striking a good counterbalance for the time we have now.  -AP

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Lenon Bus Demo (New 2012) - Jonny Craig
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Lenon Bus Demo (New 2012)

Jonny Craig

Jonny Craig “Blue Print For Going In Circles” First Listen

Who: Jonny Craig

Song: Untitled (Possible Title: I’m Still Here)

Written By - Randall 

Why You’ll Love This: Well it’s here, the first listen of the upcoming album from the one and only Johnathan Monroe Craig.  While this is still an untitled demo it gives an insight to the tone and sound of what may be headed our way from Jonny’s forthcoming, “Blue Print For Going In Circles” that is scheduled to drop early this year.  

It’s no secret that there are few figures in modern music as polarizing as Jonny.  From his infamous Macbook incident to his multiple stints in rehab, this is a man who many people have written off, even begun to hate. Still, love him or loathe him, there are few singers on the planet with a voice that captures the soul of pure imagination like him.  Sounding more introspective than ever here, this song seems to capture the sense that Jonny has finally realized that he’s quickly running out of chances.  

Sure cutting corners and placing blame will give you the badass persona that he has, but this song seems to show a humbled, tired, dare I say it… matured Jonny Craig.  The stripped down vocals, the simple strum of the guitars, even his lyrics show a definite realization that he has got to get his act together or risk wasting his incomparable talent.

In just this song, he takes on his familiar struggled with getting off of drugs: 

It’s the things that make me old
Still I’m still here
It’s the things that make cold
Yet, I’m still here

This bullshit isn’t worth my life
This bullshit isn’t worth my life
And I know, no matter what it says I’m home

The pain of knowing that he still has such a long road ahead of him:

I know I’m home, getting out of reach 
Still I sob away to know I’m just okay.

Even a feeling that he hasn’t lived up to his massive potential:

I’ve reached out, made plans to put these words in motion
But still I fall short

Overall it feels like Jonny is trying to say that he still has the pain, he still has the agony in his ecstasy-riddled vocals, but he wants to be a better man.  I think this is Jonny’s way of saying sorry in his own Jonny Craig way. 

What this 4 minute and 21 second demo shows is more profound than any follower of Jonny could believe, the man we all want to be acknowledged as the greatest singer on this planet finally seems to be coming around. Will he still be Jonny?  Of course, that part of him we love isn’t going anywhere. But maybe, just maybe we’ll see a stronger, a more resilient - maybe even a better version of the man whose voice we adore than we’ve ever seen before. 

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Who: Luminate

Song: Come Home

Why You’ll Love This: With five years experience and several EPs to their credit, it seems unfair to call Luminate a new artist. But for the Tyler, TX band, their full-length, major label project Come Home will likely be as good as a first introduction to many listeners and a great opportunity to finally let their years of hard work shine. Hooky anthems, solid pop production, and ambient touches make up the musical DNA of these twelve tracks, but it’s frontman and songwriter Sam Hancock’s lyrics that bring the heart and soul. Pounding drum beats and ethereal keys lead the way into “Innocent,” an opener that puts a huge sound right up front even as it poses loaded questions aplenty. -JFH

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If I Knew - Every Avenue
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If I Knew

Every Avenue

Midnight Mp3 - Every Avenue

Song: If I Knew (Itunes Exclusive)

For Fans Of:  The Bigger Lights, We Are The In Crowd, Artist Vs Poet, Amely, There For Tomorrow, The Summer Set, The Maine

Written By - Randall

Why You’ll Love This: I’ve loved Every Avenue ever since their “Picture Perfect” album got under the fibers of my skin and changed the way I look at music.  Their fantastic blend of alternative rock, punk, and downright uber-sexiness is one of those music-types that is so inviting for listeners.  Yet, despite this full-fledged badassery that David Strauchman and the EveryAve boys can call upon the times when they slow it down and channel the inner machinations of the human soul are when I truly adore them like no other.  

Written for their friend Lauren Freeman who was killed in a car accident by a drunk driver, the song hearkens back to the days of regret and winsome agony without being overly depressing.  Aggressively the song carries along the stringent melody with a tonality of declarative passion that almost wishes it’s notes could reach their lost friend in the Heavens above. Not as melancholy as “Between You And I” or “The Story Left Untold,” their trademark reverbed guitars are effervescent beneath the eulogy-laden lyrical prose.  

If I knew it’d be the last time
I’d try a little harder
Make that goodbye,
Last a little longer
Would’ve held you,
Just a little stronger
If I… I knew it’d be the last time
So Lauren lay your head down
I’ll be right beside you

Hardly do songs ever channel the heaviness of a forlorn heart like Every Avenue.  While other acts could have gone past the threshold of agony and simply taken on the distress of torturous torment by stripping down and pandering with cheap tear jerking; they still maintain staying true to their identities. Every Avenue is a band that courageously barrels through the resentment of loss and the longing to hold the dearly departed again with very real aplomb.  Would you expect anything less from a band as amazing as this? 

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All Of Me - Matt Hammitt
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All Of Me

Matt Hammitt

Midnight Mp3 - Matt Hammitt

Song: All Of Me

For Fans Of: Lifehouse, Sanctus Real, Relient K, Bethany Dillon

Written By - Randall

Why You’ll Love This: It’s often said that the best love songs come from having nearly lost it all.  If this idiom be true than perhaps there are few songwriters more acquainted with a trip from the edge of absolute loss than Sanctus Real lead singer Matt Hammitt. Taking the near-collapse of his marriage and the struggle for life of his newborn baby, this is one of the most tender, endearing, and totally real recordings you will ever hear. 

The lyricism of this song will catch you immediately, Afraid to love, something that could break, Could I move on, if you were torn away? I’m so close to what I can’t control I can’t give you half my heart, and pray it makes you whole.” The song conveys so much in it by both tackling the fear of losing both the love of his life and the child he helped create.  But unlike other melancholy songs about feeling miserable and inadequate, this one carried the crystal clear definition of peace in the midst of a storm with the defiance of self-betterment.  

His voice is among the more unique in the realm of modern music, husky and powerful but relatable enough that you might feel he is talking directly to you.  The ability to paint a picture of painful hopelessness seems to be an artform that even if Hammitt didn’t create, he has certainly defined it.  There is something so fancifully enticing about the way his voice flows with the build of the song and grabs your heartstrings way more than a simple pull.  There’s a reason that songs such as this pack the punch that they do: Matt Hammitt has lived his lyrics.

For those of you looking for an introspective gaze into the depths of the human soul then look no further than the richness of this fantastic artisan. His music will touch you, will enrapture you, heck it might even trigger the waterworks if you let them.  Don’t turn your back on this wonderful prose, let it defy your perception of beauty and grace.  

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