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Nickelback
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| By
Vinnie Apicella
As with many hard
rockers who've swam in the glistening waters of the mainstream, there's
usually a past to be reckoned with… or ignored, depending of course on
how the sweet taste of success has or hasn't fueled a live for the
moment ego. So Nickelback have arrived in style, their "Silver Side Up"
release achieving massive worldwide success and turning the Canadian
foursome into Rock superstars. "Curb" was originally ten years gone and
first time listeners might be thrown by the high level of guitar
riffing
and low tuning that goes with it. Those familiar will see that what
they've done today is "refined" their sound at the hand of a starry
eyed
producer who convinced them they could go further if they only would…
However, Chad Kroeger's impassioned vocals and their knack for the
catchy hook remain at the core-think of a band like The Goo Goo Dolls
before "A Boy Named Goo" hit it big and you've got a good foundation to
work with for comparison. Now for fans that jumped on the post-"Black
Album" Metallica bandwagon, well damn, that's a whole other ball of
confusion. "Curb's" got a lot more instrumentality going for it, the
arrangements not quite so simple, and exemplary of an early band going
for broke, letting loose the amperage, grunging out before dumbing
down,
and consistent with the time it was produced when groups like
Soundgarden, Alice In Chains, and Pearl Jam were running rampant across
the video screen. So before they were "Heroes," they were a little
known
Vancouver band struggling to make it in a Rock climate that's subject
to
change as often as the late summer temperatures in upstate New York.
"Curb" features an earful of ragers like "Little Friend," "Detangler,"
"Fly," or "Just Four," that are more punch than pop yet still you
wonder
how they snuck under the radar screen so easily. It's an overall solid
heavy Rock record that was previously unreleased in the states, so this
truly is a find for fans and serves as a sensible stop gap between
records, which considering their still climbing chart work, may take a
while.
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