www.411mania.com
|  News |  Album Reviews |  Columns |  News Report |  Hall Of Fame |
SPOTLIGHTS  SPOTLIGHTS
MOVIES/TV
// Eva Mendes Heats Up the Pages of Marie Claire
MUSIC
// CoCo Tweets Her Giant Boobs
WRESTLING
// Complete WWE Smackdown Taping Results (SPOILERS)
POLITICS
// Santorum Blows Out Romney, Beats Him In MN, CO, & MO
MMA
// Dana White Says Condit’s Team Has Agreed to Diaz Rematch
GAMES
// Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning Gets Launch Trailer


CD REVIEWS  CD REVIEWS
//  Imperial Teen - Feel The Sound Review
//  Seal - Soul 2 Review
//  Craig Finn - Clear Heart Full Eyes Review
//  The Big Pink - Future This Review
//  Cate Le Bon - CYRK Review
//  Snow Patrol - Fallen Empires Review
 HOT ARTISTS
//  Kanye West
//  Lil Wayne
//  Rihanna
//  Britney Spears
//  Lady GaGa
SYNDICATE  SYNDICATE



411mania RSS Feeds





Follow 411mania on Twitter!




Add 411 On Facebook
 



 
 411mania » Music » Album Reviews



Advertisement
The Answer - Everyday Demons Review
Posted by Jesse Coy on 03.25.2009



The Answer
Everyday Demons
March 2009
The End Records



Everyday Demons
1. Demon Eyes
2. Too Far Gone
3. On And On
4. Cry Out
5. Why’d You Change Your Mind
6. Pride
7. Walkin’ Mat
8. Tonight
9. Dead Of The night
10. Comfort Zone
11. Evil Man


The Answer begins not with a question (oh, brother, these corny quips better stop before I get rolling with too many of them), but rather a big fat hard rock riff that would make AC/DC proud. But don’t let that fool you. Not to knock AC/DC, but sometimes they don’t have the deepest of lyrics. I’m not saying that the Answer’s sophomore release is going to involve deep thinking, but they do have some things to say, saying them while at the same time rocking out. It begins with “Demon Eyes,” a great opener, and perhaps one of the best tracks off this one.

While not copying any specific hard or classic rock outfit, there’s a lot in place that reminds you of some of the greats of hard rock. And the second track, “Too Far Gone,” reinforces that. Anyone who’s ever heard the Who’s “The Real Me”… without being derivative in any way, “Too Far Gone” has the energy and spirit of that anthem. It’s anti-establishment and rebellion.

Vocalist Cormac Neeson has an awesome set of pipes on him. I’m talking a powerful voice that for sure involves elements of Robert Plant and Ian Gillian. While I said that nothing on this release borrows too heavily from predecessors or forefathers of this style of music, the third track, “On and On,” has Cormac sounding the most like Gillian. I swear you could slip it onto Black Sabbath’s Born Again, and it’d be a good fit.

The band slows the pace down with “Cry Out,” an excellent bluesy hard rock track, and “Why’d You Change Your Mind,” maybe a little too mellow alternative rock for me. Regardless, each of these tracks allows the vocalist to further display his impressive range. “Pride” suffers from the same weaker style. These last two tracks placed nearly dead center on this album. The band returns to form with “Walkin’ Mat,” some tight groove with attitude.

Doing a track by track accounting usually isn’t my thing, but it would be silly to cut it short at this stage. So you have “Tonight,” definitely an uplifting rocker, and while I’ve been passing praise to the vocalist, the other three in this group, guitarist Paul Mahon, bassist Micky Waters, and drummer James Heatley are tightly bundled together. It’s equally evidenced on this track, as with most of the tunes on this one.

Everyday Demons is rounded out by “Dead of the Night” (shorter and punchy, like “On and On”), “Comfort Zone” (where at moments some of the mellower moments have just a slight Led Zeppelin echo), and “Evil Man,” the band closing out on the right note, bringing some good foot-stomping blues into this rocking track, harmonica closing it all out.

The Answer hails from Northern Ireland. Dang, what other Northern Irish bands can you name (Van Morrison and Therapy?)? They’ve gotten their fair amount of attention in a relatively short time, and with good reason. My guess is that they’ll be an act to watch.


The 411: Pretty good stuff… if you’re a fan of AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, the Who, Deep Purple, or Aerosmith, here’s a new band to prove that the roots of that style still pulse strong.
 
Final Score:  8.0   [ Very Good ]  legend


Post Comment  |  Email Jesse Coy  |  View Jesse Coy's 411 Profile

  Send To Friend  |    Stumble It!  |    Digg It!  | 



Please add your comment below.
If you are registered, you can login and post under your registered name. If not, you can post as a guest or register.

* Please note that 411 moderates all comments. Your comment will show up on the site after it has been approved by an editor.
 
Name : 
Comment : 
Remaining Characters : 
2800
 




www.41mania.com
Copyright � 2011 411mania.com, LLC. All rights reserved.
Click here for our privacy policy. Please help us serve you better, fill out our survey.
Use of this site signifies your agreement to our terms of use.