ThePunkSite.com | One Win Choice - Never Suspend Disbelief
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CD: Never Suspend Disbelief |
Artist: One Win Choice |
| Label: JumpStart Records |
Rating: 4/5 |
| Best
Song: I Deny |
Reviewer: Bobby Gorman |
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One Win Choice starts their debut full length album, Never
Suspend Disbelief, with a fuzzy sound clip that combines many different
people talking politics and change. They then blast in with a solid drum
beat and gang vocals that scream "Bury Them!" It pulls you in, grabs your
attention and let's you know what you can expect for the remaining eleven
tracks on the album - and not once do they deviate from that course.
Ripping through track after track, One Win Choice is a never
ending onslaught of melodic hardcore punk. Heavy drumming lead most songs with
a strong focus on the bass drum that would get any pit moving. Dan Kloza's
vocals are crisp and strong despite having a limited range in delivery as he
normally stays
somewhere between old Rise Against and Bigwig. The
vocals are delivered with lightning speed and venomous anger, often surrounded
by some gang vocals for a little extra punch. Scattered throughout
the album is the occasional
guitar riff that blows the mind along with some excellent bass playing. It
stays in the same tempo throughout the entire thirty-three minutes, never relapsing
or holding back anything; just a continual source of energizing, fist
pumping melodic hardcore. Very few songs actually stand out of the crowd as
they normally stick to the same structure for each song, but there are enough
songs in the album
that grab your attention (Powder Keg, Bremen Six, and I
Deny for example) to keep you coming back for more.
It fits nicely in between acts like Anti-Flag, Propaghandi and Strike
Anywhere with socially conscious punk anthems. But instead of condemning
the people and government, One Win Choice takes an internal
look at politics and revolution. The theme of the album is change within
ourselves, as they shout out in Bremen Six: Now stand
up, raise your fucking voice, we can't let this plague, this poison run it's
course. It all starts in our hearts, in our minds, in our children's lives.
They don't point fingers but offer a disenfranchised view of the world and
America, particularly in New Rome. It's an album of an awakening
with talks of revolution. Sound clips
from the likes of Howard Zinn and Robert Kennedy also help cement the ideas
they are trying to portray which is, in a way, Adam Smith's ideology of the
"invisible hand" taken out of the context of
economy and brought in to every day life: by doing
what's best for ourselves we do what's best for society as a whole.
Never Suspend Disbelief is not an album that will get radio play
or major label backing, but it will flourish in the skate parks, the grimy
clubs and the punk rock underground. Fans of Strike Anywhere, Only
Crime and Propaghandi will devour it as it's
an unrelenting source of energy, youthful optimism, intelligence and revolutionary
ideals
without becoming
preachy.
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