Papa Roach at their best, a must buy!!!
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Papa Roach at their best, a must buy!!!
F.E.A.R. is the upcoming eighth album by American hard rock band Papa Roach.
Papa Roach are survivors. Very few of their contemporaries have been able to evolve and weather the tumultuous tides and trends of an industry that just can't sit still in terms of both business and music. It's a completely different world in so many ways than when the band first unleashed Infest in 2000. However, one thing hasn't changed. Papa Roach write rock tunes you just can't shake. Their latest offering F.E.A.R. (Face Everything And Rise) could very well be a “greatest hits” for the California group.
The album combines the succinct needlepoint six-stringing from Jerry Horton that made Infest strike so hard, while Jacoby Shaddix's melodies and hooks captivate with a power akin to their biggest smashes from Getting Away With Murder. Tobin Esperance adds an unshakable groove, while Tony Palermo's drums channel a punk spirit sharpened on a metal edge. The title track functions as a straight-up call-to-arms veering between a stadium-size refrain, electronic sheen, and robust guitars.
Review
The ninth studio album from California's Papa Roach, 2015's F.E.A.R. finds
the journeyman hard rock outfit delivering more of its bombastic, high-energy
sound. F.E.A.R. was produced by Kevin Churko (Ozzy Osbourne, Five Finger Death
Punch) with assistance from his son Kane Churko, and the album's title is an
acronym that stands for “Face Everything And Rise.” The dark, aggressive
irony behind this sentiment remains consistent with the angry, angst-ridden tone
that the band has been narrowly hitting for almost two decades, telegraphing
from the first moment of the title track that this is not a record intended to
win new listeners, but it should please longtime fans of the group. Since
breaking out in the late '90s along with a bevy of other nu-metal and rap-rock
bands, Papa Roach have displayed a surprising amount of staying power. In the
mid-2000s, the group abandoned the rap end of its sound to explore a more
traditional hard rock style. It's an approach they've largely stuck with,
saving their hip-hop inclinations for the occasional album track. But here,
Jacoby Shaddix delves headlong into rap on “Gravity,” a mid-album standout
that also features a strikingly effective guest vocal from In This Moment
frontwoman Maria Brink. Elsewhere, Papa Roach stick to their densely tattooed,
heavily compressed guns on such hard-hitting numbers as “Broken as Me,”
“Warriors,” and “Hope for the Hopeless,” in which Shaddix sings “I'm
counting all my bruises/I'm not counting on myself.” Ultimately, it's just
this kind of self-flagellating, dark-hued rock aesthetic that's worked for Papa
Roach for well over a decade, and despite whatever passing styles or trends in
pop music they've ignored in the process, it's a sound that seems to be working
for them. Matt Collar – Allmusic.com
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