By: Emily J Ramey
Rating: 4 of 5 stars
To be honest, I did a figurative double-take when I put on Hello Hurricane for the first time. Isn’t Switchfoot the alt-rock outfit that gave us such rapid classics as “Dare You to Move” and “Meant to Live?” The answer is of course, yes, but Jon Foreman and company are breaking new ground with their seventh LP, Hello Hurricane.
Hello Hurricane on its own is steady and captivating. Switchfoot has always been one of those rare bands that can create compositions that all audiences can respect and enjoy as generally good music, and their most recent effort is no exception. More specifically, a few of the stand-out tracks include “Needle and Haystack Life,” which is a static-y, fast-paced beginning, with optimistic lyrics out of a darkened world: ”In this needle and haystack life/I found miracles there in your eyes/It’s no accident we’re here tonight/We are once in a lifetime;” the album’s first single “Mess of Me,” a distorted, post-punk-infused rager, complete with a self-loathing chorus and a ragged, edgy performance from Foreman; “The Sound (John M. Perkins’ Blues),” which is a punchy, stout track that acts as a get-up-and-fight(!) song with lyrics like, “This is the sound of a heartbeat/This is the sound of the discontented mouths/Of a haunted nation, we are the voice of breaking down;” the unshakable, shadowy “Free” is a pleading sort of confession song with a striking and memorable chorus that’s simple and easily identified with: “Inside this shell there’s a prison cell;” the mellow, quietly sanguine refrain called “Yet” is a raw, stripped-down Switchfoot that could almost be classified as contemporary folk; and “Sing It Out,” a gently sorrowful song, with despairingly passionate lines like, “Sing it out/Sing it out/Take what is left of me/And make it a melody.”
Hello Hurricane is a battle of optimism and cynicism, positive and negative, and ultimately I think Switchfoot comes to a hopeful conclusion, not just in their songs on the album, but with the album as another milestone in their lengthy, ongoing, and consistently thriving musical career. Switchfoot, believe it or not, has broadened their musical horizons and audiences once again. Are you surprised? Yeah, me neither.
Emily J Ramey is a burgeoning young music writer, living and working in Nashville, TN. Her background includes journalism classes at New York University and a Music Business degree from Belmont University. Check out her blog at listenerextraordinaire.wordpress.com.
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