Friday, April 21, 2006

Shenoah - "Bleeding In The Red" (EP, Corporate Punishment)

Perhaps a little odd reviewing this, as two founder members (Jason Hager and Ben Hollowell) have started to focus on another band, Years Of Fire. Nevertheless, this EP is definitely worth a listen!
Coming from the increasingly noteworthy metal label in America, Shenoah are another band blazing the return to proper hard rock - there's no "-core" in here, there's nothing "nu-" about it, but there's plenty new.
Formed from the ashes of a number of bands that fell victim to the great music cull of the late 1990s and early 2000s, Shenoah have every quality necessary for a band who want to succeed, not to mention the skills to do so.
Soaring melodic choruses, low-end guitars, hard-hitting vocals, hooks to drag you along with the music. Sure, it's nothing completely new, and a lot of Corporate Punishment's bands are in the same genre, but this doesn't mean they're all copyists or devoid of original ideas. Shenoah are possibly at the heavier end, incorporating harsher sounds and verses than labelmates Allele and Switched.
Bleeding In The Red is only a short EP, a brief introduction to the band. As soon as they get their first complete album complete, there's no reason these guys shouldn't make a dent. It also means that, when the albums comes, they should have ironed out all the creases to their sound (just as Switched managed for their second album).
The only criticism is the spoken-word jolt in the middle of "Age Of The White Dove", which ruined the flow of an otherwise soaring, blood-pumping song. On the other hand, "Ashes To Ashes" is an incredibly emotional song, and one that could easily tear up the charts on either side of the Atlantic.

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