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  • Relentless
    Natalie Grant
    EMOTIONAL ROLLER COASTER Natalie Grant’s latest album, Relentless, is a reminder why she wears the crown of top female vocalist in...
  • Sound. Color. Motion.
    Farewell Flight
    SACRIFICE PAYS OFF Travelling the country for months at a time without agents or the support of a label, this Pennsylvanian do-it-yourself...
  • Everyone Overcome
    Desperation Band
    WORSHIP FOR THIS GENERATION Desperation Band, featuring worship leaders/songwriters Jared Anderson, Jon Egan and Lenn Packiam captures...
  • Expect The Impossible
    Stellar Kart
    MILDLY MORE MATURE, BUT STILL MISSES THE MARK Though Stellar Kart’s brand of mall punk might not possess enough punches to keep the...
  • Blooming Sounds
    Poems
    WITH SOME HELP FROM HIS FRIENDS Poems (formerly Sharlock Poems) of Christian rap mainstay L.A. Symphony, known for his distinctive...
  • For The Love Of The Game
    Pillar
    UNASHAMED TO ROCK FOR CHRIST Contemporary Christian music and ’80s era metal might seem like strange bedfellows, but one listen to...
  • Intermission To The Moon
    A Dream Too Late
    PROMISING DEBUT After a time spent touring with a couple of other Tooth & Nail bands (Ruth, The Send, Run Kid Run) A Dream Too Late...

Page   <  16  17  18  19  20  >

Over and Underneath
Over and Underneath
By Tenth Avenue North
SWITCHFOOT LITE, ANYONE?

New Reunion Records band Tenth Avenue North comes off as a welter-weight version of Cali-rockers Switchfoot: similar voice, similarly breezy, pop/rock band, albeit with more obvious (and more obviously Christian) lyrics. The lovely, chiming first song, “Love Is Here,” seems primed for radio, its politely rocking chorus proclaiming, “Love is pouring from His brow…and from His side.” Both it and the equally pretty “Hold My Heart” could be adult contemporary mixes of undiscovered Switchfoot tracks, sans the philosophy major lyrics.

Instead, in a few instances, you get too-simple songwriting: “Lift Us Up To Fall” is beset by a too-sing-songy chorus, also a problem on “Let It Go” and elsewhere. Despite promising, energetic songs like “Break Me Down” and the disc’s more reflective second half, one never escapes comparing vocalist Mike Donehey to Jon Foreman. As comparisons go, that’s a happy one. Though it doesn’t reach the heights of Red or Leeland’s debuts, Over and Underneath is worth a listen on its own merits; it’s consistently listenable, if not wholly original, from start to finish.
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–Beau Black
Content Provided by: http://www.ccmmagazine.com/
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
  • musicgirl247 7/29/2008 12:53 PM
    I haven't got to hear the whole album yet but I do know that I am crazy about the song Love Is Here. The lyrics are beautiful and remind me of just how much Christ loves me. That song it always stuck in my head!
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