01. Echo Of A Scream
02. 1,000 Degrees
03. No Surrender
04. The Madness
05. Won’t Let You Down
06. Changed Man
07. A Light In Me
08. Somber
09. Dancing With The Devil
10. Afterburn
After the fiasco and tragedy
that surrounded their first album with the late Scott Weiland on vocals (I say fiasco as Scott publicly said that he'd only been asked to write and record for
the album and was never actually in the band, which I'm sure was a PR disaster
for them), Art Of Anarchy is back.
When Scott sadly passed away six
months after the album's release, I thought I'd heard the last from Art Of Anarchy. However in May last
year, former Creed vocalist Scott Stapp was announced as Weiland's replacement. The rest of the
band is made up of Ron
"Bumblefoot" Thal (Guns
'n' Roses) and Jon Votta on
guitars, Vince Votta on drums, and John Moyer (Disturbed, Adrenaline Mob,
Union Underground) on bass.
Prior to joining the band, Scott Stapp was all over the news
again, not for his music, but because of his substance abuse, marriage break-up,
paranoid delusions and general crazy behaviour leading up to him returning to
rehab. My initial thought when he was announced as the new lead singer is that
the rest of the band must be gluttons for punishment, replacing a dysfunctional
rock star with drug problems with someone with similar attributes. However, when
I thought about it, it made sense as Scott
Stapp's vocals have that rich 90's Alt-Rock tone that aren't a million
miles away from Weiland's, and his
voice would probably work very well with the early material.
The lyrics on this record
clearly reflect Scott's mental
health problems, his self reflection and his path to recovery, making it a dark
and personal piece of work. I often hear heavy bands singing about rage and
insanity, but with this Art Of Anarchy
album, you know it's very real. It's a great example of turning suffering into
art, and I'm sure that writing these lyrics must have been quite cathartic for Scott. Musically, the band have that
commercial modern American rock sound that's hugely popular. In many ways, it
sounds like a mix of the bands the members all came from, Guns 'n' Roses, Creed, Disturbed and Union Underground, all carefully entwined to make a radio friendly
Heavy Rock sound that will appeal to fans of Alter Bridge, Shinedown,
Pop Evil, Theory Of A Deadman and Saliva
etc. If the band can 'keep it together', I can see Art Of Anarchy becoming huge, and deservedly so.
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