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Turf Wars
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Turf Wars in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $25.99

Barnes and Noble
Turf Wars in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $25.99
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Size: OS
On their second album, Vancouver based melodic
hardcore
outfit
Daggermouth
dial back considerably on some of the cutesy affectations that made their debut
Stallone
a fairly frustrating listen. The song titles are still unbearably coy, but less so than before, and the band has dropped the stylistic affectations that broke the flow of their debut. At 11 songs in 22 minutes, in fact,
Turf Wars
is
distilled to their essence: two-minute songs delivered with street punk's chanted gang choruses,
velocity and
pop
-
punk
's melodic strengths.
"Frisky Business"
and
"You Can't Soar Like an Eagle When You Hang out with Turkeys"
are particularly tuneful, with excellent choruses and catchy guitar riffs. Most importantly, singer
Nick Leaday
has improved greatly as a vocalist, eliminating the traces of
emo
whine that colored the debut.
is still fairly standard-issue ramalama stuff, but it's solidly listenable from start to finish, which alone makes it a big improvement from their promising but ultimately unsatisfying debut. ~ Stewart Mason
hardcore
outfit
Daggermouth
dial back considerably on some of the cutesy affectations that made their debut
Stallone
a fairly frustrating listen. The song titles are still unbearably coy, but less so than before, and the band has dropped the stylistic affectations that broke the flow of their debut. At 11 songs in 22 minutes, in fact,
Turf Wars
is
distilled to their essence: two-minute songs delivered with street punk's chanted gang choruses,
velocity and
pop
-
punk
's melodic strengths.
"Frisky Business"
and
"You Can't Soar Like an Eagle When You Hang out with Turkeys"
are particularly tuneful, with excellent choruses and catchy guitar riffs. Most importantly, singer
Nick Leaday
has improved greatly as a vocalist, eliminating the traces of
emo
whine that colored the debut.
is still fairly standard-issue ramalama stuff, but it's solidly listenable from start to finish, which alone makes it a big improvement from their promising but ultimately unsatisfying debut. ~ Stewart Mason
On their second album, Vancouver based melodic
hardcore
outfit
Daggermouth
dial back considerably on some of the cutesy affectations that made their debut
Stallone
a fairly frustrating listen. The song titles are still unbearably coy, but less so than before, and the band has dropped the stylistic affectations that broke the flow of their debut. At 11 songs in 22 minutes, in fact,
Turf Wars
is
distilled to their essence: two-minute songs delivered with street punk's chanted gang choruses,
velocity and
pop
-
punk
's melodic strengths.
"Frisky Business"
and
"You Can't Soar Like an Eagle When You Hang out with Turkeys"
are particularly tuneful, with excellent choruses and catchy guitar riffs. Most importantly, singer
Nick Leaday
has improved greatly as a vocalist, eliminating the traces of
emo
whine that colored the debut.
is still fairly standard-issue ramalama stuff, but it's solidly listenable from start to finish, which alone makes it a big improvement from their promising but ultimately unsatisfying debut. ~ Stewart Mason
hardcore
outfit
Daggermouth
dial back considerably on some of the cutesy affectations that made their debut
Stallone
a fairly frustrating listen. The song titles are still unbearably coy, but less so than before, and the band has dropped the stylistic affectations that broke the flow of their debut. At 11 songs in 22 minutes, in fact,
Turf Wars
is
distilled to their essence: two-minute songs delivered with street punk's chanted gang choruses,
velocity and
pop
-
punk
's melodic strengths.
"Frisky Business"
and
"You Can't Soar Like an Eagle When You Hang out with Turkeys"
are particularly tuneful, with excellent choruses and catchy guitar riffs. Most importantly, singer
Nick Leaday
has improved greatly as a vocalist, eliminating the traces of
emo
whine that colored the debut.
is still fairly standard-issue ramalama stuff, but it's solidly listenable from start to finish, which alone makes it a big improvement from their promising but ultimately unsatisfying debut. ~ Stewart Mason

















