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THEORY OF A DEADMAN Say Nothing By Andrew Depedro, Ottawa Corespondent Saturday, February 15, 2020 @ 12:18 AM
With that said, the quartet comprised of Tyler Connolly (frontman/guitarist), Dave Brenner (guitarist), Joey Dandeneau (bass) and Dean Back (drums) have been known to be more musically ambitious on every second or third release in their catalogue, starting from Identikit-style post-grunge on their debut self-titled album, to full-on angry stadium rock by 2008’s
As you can imagine, THEORY’s latest album Say Nothing, featuring the return of Martin Terefe’s slick production magic, is very much a hard sell in persuading the average rock fan into accepting it as being anything other than a rock album. And more than 95% of the album is bonafide mainstream pop/rock with slick orchestration sounds in the background, owing more to LINKIN PARK and MAROON 5 in parts than to METALLICA despite the bleak-sounding titles such as “Black Hole In Your Heart”, “Quicksand” and the lead-off single “History Of Violence”. But what the album may lack in sonic aggressiveness, it compensates well in relatable songwriting in the modern age.
Going back to “History Of Violence”, which is the most Sam Roberts-sounding THEORY track ever recorded, the lyrics speak to and about the vulnerable female partner of an abusive relationship and the injustices she finds herself up against, prompting revenge against her abuser – think of a more socially-conscious version of NICKELBACK’s “Never Again”, which would fit nicely on Season 2 of This Is Us. “Affluenza” is also in the same lyrical realm with Connolly chanting his best Mike Shinoda impersonation about the stigma of growing up working class. “Strangers” is a proper commentary on communal exclusion from the effect of social media which begs the question of “how low can we go?”. And to cap off the socially conscious factor of the album, “White Boy” features audio snippets of the 2017 Charlottesville demonstration that was marred by clashes between anti-racism protestors and white supremacists as it transcends into a message of how “we’re different but we’re all the same”. But luckily for the rock fan hoping to at least get a semblance of a track with a guitar sound on it, the track “Ted Bundy” has a decent opening riff with a garage rock vibe to it, which stands out for a while before subsiding into the background wall of orchestration by the climax.
So, while THEORY’s original theory as a band was to merely gig and record at a similar level of success and volume as their counterparts in NICKELBACK, Say Nothing, for the better part, at least demonstrates which of the two can say the most with the least cacophony in their music. And sometimes, for all music fans, relatability is something that we should all strive to make some noise about.
3.5 Out Of 5.0
https://www.theoryofficial.com/
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