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The Verge
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The Verge
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
The Verge
Current price: $15.99
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The Verge
that Orlando quartet
There for Tomorrow
seems to be on on the album of that name is maturity, at least of a preliminary sort. What that means for a group that has been making noise since its members' early teens is that they are moving on from such early influences as
Jimmy Eat World
to a more sophisticated, if still forceful sound as they get more playing under their belts. Singer
Maika Maile
still boasts a throaty high tenor that adds urgency to his words, and lead guitarist
Christian Climer
is still coming up with burning leads. But those leads sometimes suggest the influence of
the Edge
, and the music in general often betrays a familiarity with early
U2
.
Maile
certainly doesn't have
Bono
's wordiness or sense of the universal message; he's mostly expressing his dissatisfaction with a romantic situation, as he does in "Nowhere Blvd." ("We're going separate ways on Nowhere Boulevard.") But he isn't quite as anxious as he was in his youth, and he can even be more cautious in giving advice rather than being judgmental, with the final song called "I'd Be Changing If I Were You." This is not to say, however, that
is pulling its punches as it reaches its prime, only that it is getting a little more careful in choosing its targets. ~ William Ruhlmann
that Orlando quartet
There for Tomorrow
seems to be on on the album of that name is maturity, at least of a preliminary sort. What that means for a group that has been making noise since its members' early teens is that they are moving on from such early influences as
Jimmy Eat World
to a more sophisticated, if still forceful sound as they get more playing under their belts. Singer
Maika Maile
still boasts a throaty high tenor that adds urgency to his words, and lead guitarist
Christian Climer
is still coming up with burning leads. But those leads sometimes suggest the influence of
the Edge
, and the music in general often betrays a familiarity with early
U2
.
Maile
certainly doesn't have
Bono
's wordiness or sense of the universal message; he's mostly expressing his dissatisfaction with a romantic situation, as he does in "Nowhere Blvd." ("We're going separate ways on Nowhere Boulevard.") But he isn't quite as anxious as he was in his youth, and he can even be more cautious in giving advice rather than being judgmental, with the final song called "I'd Be Changing If I Were You." This is not to say, however, that
is pulling its punches as it reaches its prime, only that it is getting a little more careful in choosing its targets. ~ William Ruhlmann