Get the new FREE JFH MP3 compilation -- Vol. 13!
Get the new FREE JFH MP3 compilation -- Vol. 13!

JFH Music Review


We Are Leo, The Rush & The Roar
CLICK COVER TO ENLARGE

We Are Leo
The Rush & The Roar



Artist Info: Discography
Genre(s): Pop
Album length: 11 tracks: 38 minutes, 24 seconds
Street Date: May 26, 2017


READER RATING:   


The first few seconds of "Dimensions," the opening track to We Are Leo's The Rush & The Roar, sound like a mix of One Direction's "Best Song Ever" and the 1975. I appreciate the way artists such as 1D and the 1975 take cues from the 80's but repurpose those sounds in a fresh, modern way. During these opening seconds, I thought I was about to hear something similarly special from the Dream Records pop band. Then my hopes were shattered with the entrance of David Duffield's stale, characterless singing, proclaiming lines like "same song on the stereo" with an odd sense of importance. A strong chorus nearly keeps "Dimensions" afloat, but catchy choruses aren't able to save every song on this album -- especially when most songs boast entry-level lyrics for kids who've never heard music before.

Oddly, this album is front-loaded with its weakest songs. "Astronaut" is as bad as it sounds. "CRZY AWSM" lacks any sense of momentum or urgency for what's supposed to be a party song...and it also lacks any discernible pattern for dropping vowels in its title. (They know they left an "a" in there, right?) "Low Key" is Tobymac-lite, employing Funk 101 bass-playing and a solid guitar solo to establish itself as the only musically noteworthy song. (However, drummer Joshua Sentner does spice up a few tracks with his perfectly-timed fills.) "Warrior" makes the album's most direct reference to Christ with the line "nail-pierced hands," but otherwise the song's message gets confused between God's-strength-through-our-weakness versus self-empowerment.

When "61 / Twenty-Three" shows up, the mid-album appearance of such a great song seems accidental. Thankfully, this song marks a turning point on the album. "Salt Life" is a sugar high of surf rock, replete with a Switchfoot reference. The title track aims for the alternative rock of early-Mae, Falling Up, and Over It, creating a highlight that suggests We Are Leo should forever leave behind bubblegum pop for more rock. "Young Eyes" trails off into meandering territory for its final minute, but it begins as a shockingly beautiful track with lush harmonies and the most modern production on the album. Unfortunately, the endings of most of these songs are crippled by an overabundance of background vocals. And while the whole back half of The Rush & The Roar stays consistently enjoyable, "Shine Forever" and "The Way That I Feel" can't quite stand under the weight of their pedestrian lyrics.

There's also something more insidious to these lyrics than utilizing cheesy cliches. No joke: eight of these eleven songs use the word "feel." This word is usually attached to some vague reference to God, e.g., "I feel your love/strength/breath/hope." And while eight of these songs also make mention to celestial bodies ("sun," "stars," etc.), the insistent use of the word "feel" does more than make we wonder if the album was written from a vocabulary of 65 words. This album presents a version of pseudo-Christianity that's all about positivity, sunshine, and "feeling" God. There's barely a lick of biblical doctrine throughout; instead, we get a lot of hopeful feelings that everything's gonna be alright. (Ignore that Jesus promised hardship and persecution to his followers.) 

Honestly, I would love to hear an album of worshipful pop like "61 / Twenty-Three" (the album's most theologically-sturdy track), an album of unabashed surf rock a la "Salt Life," or an alt-rock album in line with title track "The Rush & The Roar." But I cannot recommend the first half of this album to anyone, especially not the type of cynics who already accuse Christian music of poorly rehashing secular music. But I also can't wholeheartedly recommend the latter half of the album to Christians, in fear that it will support an individualistic religiosity that's more Sola Feels than Soli Deo Gloria. Either way, unless lines like "light it up and let it glow / hey oh come on let’s go" or "rock and roll blue sky feeling" really get you going, this album (as a whole) is not for you.

- Review date: 5/25/17, written by Chase Tremaine of Jesusfreakhideout.com



(JFH Sponsor Spot)

Get the new FREE JFH MP3 compilation -- Vol. 13!

 

. Record Label: Dream Records
. Album length: 11 tracks: 38 minutes, 24 seconds
. Street Date: May 26, 2017
. Buy It: iTunes
. Buy It: Amazon Music (MP3)

  1. Dimensions (3:48)
  2. Astronaut (3:15)
  3. CRZY AWSM (Crazy Awesome) (3:29)
  4. Low Key (3:01)
  5. Warrior (3:32)
  6. 61 / Twenty-Three (3:05)
  7. Salt Life (3:26)
  8. The Rush & The Roar (3:38)
  9. Young Eyes (3:46)
  10. Shine Forever (3:37)
  11. The Way That I Feel Now (3:47)

 



Leave a Comment

 

 

go to main Album review page
go to Album review archive

 


(JFH Sponsor Spot)

 

 

                 
Get the new FREE JFH MP3 compilation -- Vol. 13!

Search JFH




This Friday, November 8, 2024
ALBUMS
Gabby Barrett Carols and Candlelight [Warner Music Nashville]
CXMMXNS CXMMXNS Chapter 1 - EP [Essential Worship]
New Hope Oahu There Is One - EP [DREAM]
Neal Morse & The Resonance No Hill For A Climber [InsideOut]
TAKE Time Bomb [Resuscitation Records]
Lauren Talley A Lauren Talley Christmas [Horizon]

SINGLES
Cory Asbury I Hope You Dance - Single [BEC]
Jordan Kauflin, Laura Story Approach, My Soul - Single [Getty]
Sam Bowman & GLADDEN Misfit Toys - Single [DREAM]
Wavorly Enemies - Single (independent)

VINYL
Michael W. Smith Every Christmas Vinyl [Rocketown]
Stryper To Hell with the Amps Vinyl [Frontiers]
TAKE Time Bomb Vinyl [Resuscitation Records]

DVD
Stryper To Hell with the Amps Blu-Ray [Frontiers]

Next Friday, November 15, 2024
ALBUMS
Dolly Parton & Family Smoky Mountain DNA – Family, Faith & Fables [Owepar Entertainment]
The Lore Family Faith Over Fear [Horizon]
Fernando Ortega For All the Saints - EP (independent)
Earnest Pugh Worth is the Lamb
We Are Messengers Rejoice! (A Celtic Christmas) - EP [Curb]
Paul Wright III Reverie [United Alliance]

SINGLES
Big Dismal Here In My Heart - Single (independent)
Hannah Kerr It Came Upon A Midnight Clear - Single [Curb]
Olivia Lane Silent Night - Single [BEC]
Tasha Layton Wake Up It's Christmas - Single [BEC]
Jamie MacDonald A Million Chances - Single [Capitol CMG]
Ronnie Martin On Christmas Morning - Single [Velvet Blue]
Hunter Plake Daylight - Single [BEC]
Jordan St. Cyr Christ is Here - Single [BEC]

VINYL
Sixpence None the Richer Divine Discontent Vinyl [Word]



For all release dates, click here!
 



Check out the new album from Taylor Holland Armstrong!



Listen to the new Single from Second Adam and the New Creations!

Check out depositphotos for royalty free images