The Black Swan

04/22/2008 | Epitaph / Ada 

Review

If you want to keep up with St. Louis's Story Of The Year, then you better chug a few cans of Red Bull (or your energy drink of choice) before submerging yourself in the three chord chaos that populates much of The Black Swan. You'll barely make it out alive after album opener, the supersized anthem "Choose Your Fate" if you haven't armed yourself with energy and the ability to pay fucking attention.

However, Story Of The Year aren’t just copious amounts of vim and vigor on The Black Swan, although these kids sure do know how to pen an anthem that resounds, that incites the kids in the pit to sing along while raising their fingers and pointing their fists. "Wake Up" and "The Antidote" are excellent examples of the band's ability to write traditional, verse-chorus-verse songs and inject them with fraternal chants, chafing guitar ferocity, and two-tiered vocal attack. "Terrified" is an unexpected (if a little wimpy) ballad, and it’s not my favorite song on the record, but it sure throws you for a loop and is a refreshing change of pace. Sometimes you need to pull out an umbrella in the middle of the storm, and this song allows that, even though it does come at the tail end of the album. But the majority of The Black Swan snaps and crackles.

—Amy Sciarretto
04.03.08


All Music Guide Review

Story of the Year claim to have finally found their musical identity with The Black Swan, their first indie release via Epitaph after two studio albums over on Maverick Records; it sounds to be basically a fusion of the band's prior releases, a happy middle ground somewhere between the soul-searching alt rock anthems of their debut and the harder, gutsier In the Wake of Determination. But as self-assured as that may sound, all it really means is, well, The Black Swan is another Story of the Year album. This predictability doesn't necessarily make a tiresome set -- exhilarating closer "Welcome to Our New War" finishes the proceedings with a nice adrenaline rush -- just one that's pretty much expected, which will probably comfort some, but do nothing to convert anyone still sitting on the fence. Fans will bask in the familiar rise and fall sing-scream dynamics of songs like "Wake Up," "Choose Your Fate," and "Apathy Is a Deathwish," while elsewhere they'll appreciate relatively softer moments, as in the soaring emotions of "We're Not Gonna Make It" and the piano-embossed ballad "Terrified," which comes complete with gentle drum rolls and sweet vocal harmonies. Songs build, crash, chug and crescendo as expected, proving that Story of the Year's new home on Epitaph does nothing to alter or influence the quintet's take on emotional, accessible rock music with hardcore flourishes. It's superficially an odd pairing of label and band, but one that ultimately affects little more than the logo stamped on the album's back cover. ~ Corey Apar, All Music Guide



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