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The Bitter Truth
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The Bitter Truth
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
The Bitter Truth
Current price: $16.99
Size: CD
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Ten years after their last album of original material, alternative metal outfit
Evanescence
continued their late-era comeback with their fifth full-length,
The Bitter Truth
. In the decade following their enjoyable (but by-the-numbers) self-titled third set,
Amy Lee
and company -- guitarist
Troy McLawhorn
, bassist
Tim McCord
, drummer
Will Hunt
, and guitarist
Jen Majura
-- kept the brand alive with tours and album reissues, but the project wasn't fully reignited until the grand orchestral reimaginings of
Synthesis
arrived in 2017. Riding that creative wave, they got to work on what would become
, barreling through the COVID-19 lockdown and completing the album with producer
Nick Raskulinecz
(
Korn
,
Halestorm
). Standing tall alongside their breakthrough debut,
Fallen
, and its follow-up
The Open Door
Truth
is one of the band's most engaging works, balancing sonic power with
Lee
's inimitable vocals and songwriting. Amidst world events, personal loss, and global turmoil, the group flips that pain and darkness by focusing on healing, self-growth, and emotional maturation. From the first keyboard twinkles on opener "Artifact/The Turn,"
commands the show, setting the stage with a haunting
Tori Amos
-meets-
Dido
dirge that bubbles to life with atmospheric electronics. Everything clicks together once the band joins
on "Broken Pieces Shine," with pounding drums, lurching bass, chugging riffs, and minor-key harmonies buffering her soaring voice and stirring lyrics. Even through cries of "I'm not fine," she urges listeners to embrace the bad with the good, both for survival and empowerment. That sentiment courses through the album, as metallic muscle pushes her urgent messages, like when she declares "I will be more than my survival" on the yearning "Part of Me" and calls for redemption of a broken world on "Blind Belief." "Use My Voice" is a rallying cry that
penned to inspire personal awakening and female empowerment; to drive the point home, she recruited
Sharon den Adel
Within Temptation
),
Lzzy Hale
Taylor Momsen
the Pretty Reckless
Lindsey Stirling
, and many more for the inspirational gang chorus.
also serves plenty of callbacks, such as the crunchy "The Game Is Over" and the corrosive "Feeding the Dark," which could have easily found a home on
and
, respectively. Additional heavy highlights include "Better Without You," a whirlwind of down-tuned guitars, clattering production, dramatic piano chords, and a show-stopping chorus; the torrential "Take Cover," which blasts toward the horizon atop a frenzied attack that is the closest they toe the nostalgic nu-metal line; and the unexpectedly groovy "Yeah Right," which manages to sound like
Muse
meets
Billie Eilish
. For fans of quieter moments like "My Immortal" and "Lost in Paradise,"
delivers the sweeping "Far from Heaven," a devastating beauty that once again recalls
. Altogether,
carries listeners on a journey both familiar and fresh, recapturing the heavy-yet-melodic hallmarks that made
one of the most successful albums of the 2000s and pushing
into the future with a graceful maturity and worldly perspective. ~ Neil Z. Yeung
Evanescence
continued their late-era comeback with their fifth full-length,
The Bitter Truth
. In the decade following their enjoyable (but by-the-numbers) self-titled third set,
Amy Lee
and company -- guitarist
Troy McLawhorn
, bassist
Tim McCord
, drummer
Will Hunt
, and guitarist
Jen Majura
-- kept the brand alive with tours and album reissues, but the project wasn't fully reignited until the grand orchestral reimaginings of
Synthesis
arrived in 2017. Riding that creative wave, they got to work on what would become
, barreling through the COVID-19 lockdown and completing the album with producer
Nick Raskulinecz
(
Korn
,
Halestorm
). Standing tall alongside their breakthrough debut,
Fallen
, and its follow-up
The Open Door
Truth
is one of the band's most engaging works, balancing sonic power with
Lee
's inimitable vocals and songwriting. Amidst world events, personal loss, and global turmoil, the group flips that pain and darkness by focusing on healing, self-growth, and emotional maturation. From the first keyboard twinkles on opener "Artifact/The Turn,"
commands the show, setting the stage with a haunting
Tori Amos
-meets-
Dido
dirge that bubbles to life with atmospheric electronics. Everything clicks together once the band joins
on "Broken Pieces Shine," with pounding drums, lurching bass, chugging riffs, and minor-key harmonies buffering her soaring voice and stirring lyrics. Even through cries of "I'm not fine," she urges listeners to embrace the bad with the good, both for survival and empowerment. That sentiment courses through the album, as metallic muscle pushes her urgent messages, like when she declares "I will be more than my survival" on the yearning "Part of Me" and calls for redemption of a broken world on "Blind Belief." "Use My Voice" is a rallying cry that
penned to inspire personal awakening and female empowerment; to drive the point home, she recruited
Sharon den Adel
Within Temptation
),
Lzzy Hale
Taylor Momsen
the Pretty Reckless
Lindsey Stirling
, and many more for the inspirational gang chorus.
also serves plenty of callbacks, such as the crunchy "The Game Is Over" and the corrosive "Feeding the Dark," which could have easily found a home on
and
, respectively. Additional heavy highlights include "Better Without You," a whirlwind of down-tuned guitars, clattering production, dramatic piano chords, and a show-stopping chorus; the torrential "Take Cover," which blasts toward the horizon atop a frenzied attack that is the closest they toe the nostalgic nu-metal line; and the unexpectedly groovy "Yeah Right," which manages to sound like
Muse
meets
Billie Eilish
. For fans of quieter moments like "My Immortal" and "Lost in Paradise,"
delivers the sweeping "Far from Heaven," a devastating beauty that once again recalls
. Altogether,
carries listeners on a journey both familiar and fresh, recapturing the heavy-yet-melodic hallmarks that made
one of the most successful albums of the 2000s and pushing
into the future with a graceful maturity and worldly perspective. ~ Neil Z. Yeung