areuonsomething.com Track listing: 1. Intro 2. Until The End 3. Nothing 4. Breathe 5. Oblivion 6. Negative Noise 7. Fine 8. Lies 9. Down How many times have I heard it? Probably two and half . . . three million times. The old "I've got a friend that plays in a band" thing. I must say, there has never been a time when I have not checked out a band that a friend has asked me to check out. I love to support the local bands and independents who are making squat and playing music for the "love of the game," if you will. But, in all honesty, most bands turn out to be average or below 9 times out of 10. Well . . . meet that tenth band. Hailing from South Africa, D-Day 4-Ever is a five-piece hard rock outfit that is much more than the typical unsigned band. We hear most unsigned bands doing something that will get them on a bandwagon. Most young bands make the critical mistake of trying to be somebody they are not. With these nine tracks on D-Day's independently released "Detonator" disc, the band proves that they are not out to "fit in." Don't get me wrong, you might here a tinge of Godsmack in the blistering track "Nothing", or some harmony vocals reminiscent of Alice In Chains, or even a similar song style to that of fellow hard rocking South Africans Seether but make no mistake, D-Day 4-Ever is doing what comes naturally to them. This is a genuine sound that flows out of the band like an open wound. The passionate vocal performance from singer Jaco Jacobs on "Breathe," and the beautifully melodic bass lines from bassist Roy Melville throughout the record insure the listener that they are getting something pure here. The band also overcomes the next big pitfall of the average bar band, lack of diversity. Most young unsigned acts are stagnant with their approach to the genre. It's almost as if they are afraid to venture too far away from what's "acceptable." DD4E starts out with a bass driven intro with some spacey psychedelic effects, and quickly smacks us clear across the room with a riff that caused me some voluntary head trauma. "Until The End" is just plain wicked. It's the attitude and "punch" of Rage Against The Machine, with the melodic majesty of an Alice In Chains a most fresh and welcome sound. One of the best songs that I've heard in the genre in a very long time. |