SCARS OF TOMORROW
Rope Tied to the Trigger (Victory)
Reviewed by Jason
Thornberry
Occasionally hardcore, or what passes for it
today, gets too predictable, and the tone-deaf
singers with their cookie monster jabberings
about the lies of democracy feel just like a
piece of pizza tastes when it's been in the
microwave too long. Occasionally it all sounds
like a gelatinous glob of shit, with very little
creativity, but lots of style biting.
Every so often I feel like an album (any style)
is just a cop-out by four or five guys who'd play
almost fucking anything to get somewhere. Some
bands could easily grab a trombone player, make
their colors all clash, get the first name that
pops into a passing three-year-old's head, and
start playing ninth wave ska. Or they could start
chain smoking, abuse their mother's eyeliner,
shrink their clothing and become an "indie" band.
You see where this could go, right?
Scars of Tomorrow came up fast, but luckily, seem
sincere about the eleven songs here. They seem to
truly enjoy the weighty noise they make, but the
singer, though adequate, may as well be a roadie
for all he's really contributing. Or, if they
just taught him how to actually sing a little it
would keep them from getting pigeonholed with
bands who've far, far less ability. I liked
Rope regardless, especially "Suffocating
Words", but wish they'd offer some
variation in the voice department, but hey, maybe
he can haul a mean amp?
7/10
© 2004 - Jason Thornberry