Posts Tagged: daughtry


2
Mar 09

Angels and Devils (2007) by Fuel

Angels and Devils by Fuel

Fuel
Angels and Devils

2007, Sony Records
rock, post-grunge
2½

Fresh from their late 90s-early 2000 heyday with hit single “Hemmorage (In My Hands)”, the loss of lead singer Brett Scallions, rejection by American Idol fave Chris Daughtry, and a nationwide search for a new lead singer, Fuel returned in 2007 fronted by Toryn Green, who just happens to be a disturbingly nasal version of Brett Scallions (as if Scallions weren’t nasal enough). Was he a worthy choice for Fuel to make a ‘comeback’? Yes, and no.

Yes, because he is adequate for Fuel’s purposes. Fuel has never been a band of ingenuity or originality, and that is never clearer than it is in Angels and Devils. When required he can yell and mellow down with the best of them, and his voice is scratchy enough to give the band back its ‘rock cred.’

No, because he has added absolutely nothing new to this album or Fuel itself. I’d even go as far as accusing lead songwriter Carl Bell of lifting lyrics from previous Fuel albums if I could be bothered to search them. But this album is so beyond mediocre that I can’t even deem it a possible guilty pleasure. Not really worth a listen, and definitely not worth a buy.

“Again,” “Angels Take A Soul.”
myspace, last.fm
Three Days Grace’s One-X, Daughtry’s Daughtry

  • Share/Bookmark

15
Oct 07

Daughtry (2006) by Daughtry

Genre: alt rock/post-grunge
Rating:
Check Out: “It’s Not Over,” “Breakdown,” “Sorry,” “Home”
Official Site, Myspace

As we all saw on American Idol, Daughtry (the man and the band) has a very specific style. It’s very similar to Live and Fuel in that he relies on great hooks. The other notable thing is that Chris Daughtry has an amazing voice. Let’s face it – he really does. And every song on this album just accentuates it perfectly. He has a flair for the dramatic and the emphatic, and you really can’t go wrong with that when you sound like him.

The really unfortunate thing about this album is that all the songs sound so similar. I really wish he’d made the effort to expand his musical horizons a bit (as Simon Cowell seems to have said multiple times), but for a debut I suppose this will do.

  • Share/Bookmark