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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Real Good Stuff Here
I never heard of these guys until a got a reccomendation from someone at my school to listen to them. I really didn't know what to expect going into this cd, but in the end, I was very impressed, like the time I heard Junction 18 for the first time. These guys have a very unique sound to them. The same person who told me to listen to them said they sounded like Thursday...
Published on December 24, 2001 by Alucard

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Hasn't Aged Well
This is a pretty good debut. It certainly shows the promise the band had (and would eventually deliver on). But there aren't an overwhelming amount of amazing songs here. And it sounds more dated every year. Loved it when it was initially released. I just can't get into it the way I used to. Perhaps I've just been spoiled by everything they've done since its release. To...
Published 8 months ago by Shane Windham


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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Real Good Stuff Here, December 24, 2001
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
I never heard of these guys until a got a reccomendation from someone at my school to listen to them. I really didn't know what to expect going into this cd, but in the end, I was very impressed, like the time I heard Junction 18 for the first time. These guys have a very unique sound to them. The same person who told me to listen to them said they sounded like Thursday. In a way, they do, but that's not a very good comparison to make about them. For one, they have a much, much punkier sound then Thursday. Thursday is more of a hardcore emo band. Two, they are much faster than Thursday. Thursday has much more of a slower, flowing pace to them. These guys always have a pretty fast pace in their songs. The only comparision I can make about the two groups is that both their lead singers can go from singing to screaming instantly. I've always liked when bands do that, It adds more intensity to their songs. Anyhow, this is a really good cd, and Thrice has an original, good sound that will pull you into the cd.

Like Thursday's lead, their singer can go from singing to screaming in seconds. Along with the fast pace, it goes very well. They remind me mostly of AFI, another band that intertwines singing and screaming at a fast pace. Anyhow, I really should stop making comparisions, I'm just trying to think of ways to describe their sound. The lyrics on this cd are very good, well written and deep, especially on the title track "Identity Crisis".

The guitar and basslines are also very good, keeping the pace nice and fast and having a harder edge to them. The drum work is also good, setting the pace very well. Also look out for some nifity guitar solos in "To What End" and "T & C".

My favorite tracks would be "Identity Crisis", which sets the setting for the cd perfectly, "In Your Hands", a really good song without any screaming, "Ultra Blue", which is really cathcy, and "To What End" and "T & C" for their awesome instrumentations.

So, do not overlook these guys. They are really good and have a really awesome cd out. I'm hopefully going to see them live one day, pending on when they come to my area or not, I really hope they do.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The first of three amazing albums, March 12, 2005
By 
David - Thrice fan (Liverpool, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
Thrice is amazing, they are by far my favorate band and in my opinion one of the best in their genre. I first heard the intro to T&C and immediately bought the CD, a decision i've never regretted. They have all the qualities of a good band; good lyrics, good singing and good instrumentals.

The album opens with Identity Crisis, one of the best on the album and an excellent way to open it. Brings you right into the feel of the music, your immediately taken in; swallowed up.

Then in Phoesnix Ignition comes a good acoustic intro, some good lyrics and then into one of the heavier tracks with an excellent bridge in the middle tieing the song together.

In your hands combines some good riffs and harmonies used with the lyrics, well executed to give a great song.

Then To What End is very much the bands emotions towards parts of life, again there are great riffs and lyrics.

Ultra Blue, my second favorate, a truely amazing piece of music. The lyrics combined with supporting guitar is amazing. The guitar on its own is superb, especially in the bridge/solo.

As The Ruin Falls is another heavy song but fits in well with the aura of the other tracks. Leads well into the next track.

The Next Day I wouldn't class as a song but the eye of the storm, a little piece or maybe an interval. With the storm in the background and the soft guitar is quite relaxing and in its own way is an emotion of the band, relaxed and happy.

After that brief interlude we lead back into another of the heaviest tracks, A Torch To End All Torches, the heavy guitar is well placed and gives great effect, alot of thought went into this song and was well worth it. The Next Day lingers on in this track with a calm to it all and well brought back into the song with the heavy guitar.

Unquestioned Answers was a good intro and some great guitar, then topped with good vocals and lyrics.

The second best intro takes place in Under Par, amazing guitar. Then the heavy guitar takes over and helped by the vocals makes an excellent song.

And finally the best song with the best intro, T&C, amazing! Truely something that should be in a musical history book. It is amazing, every part is played perfectly and every element of the song is great with each other. The vocals, the guitar, the everything, there is nothing better that this, i can't think of anything that can top it. Then leads into a climax at the end as the album is brought to an end. The CD could be bought for this one track alone it's so good.

Every song is 10/10, truely amazing and just adds to an amzing album, then Thrice followed this up with two more excellent albums. This is a must buy, if you don't you have a problem and should see a psychiatrist. The best album of the best band.

David
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, January 14, 2003
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
A seamless blend of cruching Metallica-inspired riffage and emotional hardcore at its most melodic. Lead singer Dustin Kensrue's voice moves effortlessly from melodic singing to passionate screaming, and the lyrics show an intelligence and insight rare in modern bands, with To What End being one of the best examples of the band's ability to articulate themselves. It's a pity that the subtleties of the lyrics have a tendency to be lost amidst the music, but you're never left in any doubt of the passion and conviction behind the songs.

The melody of the opening title track is simply irrestible, and the variation in their music is demonstrated by the second track Phoenix Ignition, which opens like an acoustic ballad and then develops into the heaviset song on the album, remaining powerful yet melodic. Other highlights come towards the end, with the powerful Torch To End All Torches, the memorably melodic Unquestioned Answers and Under Par showing their metal influences, before finishing on a high with Teppei's solo in T&C.

My main grip with the album is that it finishes too early, with 11 fairly short tracks, one of which (The Next Day) is a simple 1 minute instrumental which really can't be considered a song at all. Still, at least it means there isn't a surplus minute on the album, and packed into a short space of time you get enough brilliant songs to persuade you to hit the repeat button. You're not being short-changed here. Even the poppier songs like Ultra Blue (which the band claim to hate) and In Your Hands have a heavy underpinning and don't get irritating. In fact, it's a pity that todays "pop punk" merchants don't write songs more like Ultra Blue.

For a debut album, the production, musicianship and songwriting are simply superb; light years ahead of their demo release. It's easy to see why this album won Thrice such rave reviews in the US underground; it's a CD worthy of any collection, and one which is worth many repeat listenings. If you liked Thrice's album The Illusion Of Safety, then it's a must buy. And if you're wondering which one to buy, buy them both! (this is my personal favourite; most fans prefer the later IOS, but both are steets ahead of most of their contemporaries)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Technical, musical and lyrical KNOCKOUT, March 9, 2001
By 
B (La Mirada, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
This CD, simply put, is a MUST BUY! I have followed THRICE since the beginning and have owned this CD for over a year. I haven't stopped listening to it. It definitely satisfies. THRICE puts the core in hardcore. Each song bleeds passion and each song cuts right to the soul. Everything about this album leaves me speechless. Still waiting for the next one.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not very tight, but AMAZING!, March 9, 2006
By 
S (New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
I first heard "To What End" on a compilation a while back and was amazed but also positive that the rest of their music couldn't possibly be as great. Up to that point I had heard so few punk songs (I'm not going to play the genre game- call them screamo or whatever if you want, but if bands like Sum 41 can be called punk I certainly think Thrice can too) that were as meaningful and well written as that song, and I assumed that it was them at their best and would be found on an album full of medicore filler tracks. When I eventually obtained a copy of Identity Crisis I found out just how wrong I was.

I won't say that this is Thrice at their best, but its damn close. Thrice's later work was much more tight than this but I have to say that I really don't mind the guitar solos being all over the place and the lack of song structure. On the one hand its usually a sign of a band lacking maturity to lack a tight structure but in Thrice's case their lyrics and general songwriting do a lot of negate this impression. At the very least it kept things interesting. While in many ways Thrice was playing punk music, their not using the verse/chorus formula along with their use of guitar solos definately contributed to making this more memorable than most punk albums. Generic three cord punk rock this is not.

But more importantly than the structure of the songs or the genre was the songs themselves: they were simply some of the best written songs out there: the opening track with its soft verses and shouted choruses, "T & C" with its great guitar intro, "Ultra Blue"'s guitar work, and a "Torch to End All Torche" and "To What End"'s lyrics. Meaningful lyrics, great music backing it up, and a sound that stands apart not only from other Thrice CD's but from most other punk/posthardcore/screamo- a more than worthy first (full length at least as far as I know) effort.

Now for the bad news. There's isn't much, mostly just the above mentioned lack of song structure which unfortunately makes it sound less mature, but perhaps thats just because people have come to associate tight songs with mature musicianship. The songs also might sound like an early effort because of the contrast between this album's production and that on their later releases. Thats not fair to Thrice, and in the end it doesn't really take anything away from this release. This is essentially Thrice playing punk rock with some hardcore influences which makes it sound more primitive than the post-hardcore sound of later Thrice but which, like the production, doesn't take anything away from this release's quality. A few of the songs are also somewhat weak, for example "A Torch to End All Torches" doesn't get really good until the end. The first part is a sort of generic punk song but then its slows down and after a fairly long instramental Dustin comes back with a completely different sounding ending and lyrics that are as Christian as you can get without sounding overbearing, though its possible that those unfamiliar with Christian imagery won't even recognize it (but "by his grace I am sustained" gave it away for me). A few others aren't quite as amazing as some of the above mentioned ones, though none of them are bad or worthy of skipping.

This was the first Thrice CD I ever heard so I can't say how fans who have heard newer Thrice first will react but at the very least they will like if they don't love it like I do. Its good music, do yourself a favor and buy it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This CD has its high points, February 20, 2003
By 
Jon Dough (nowhere in particular) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
This is an awesome CD. I can't say enough good things about Thrice. They are able to combine hardcore riffs with beautifully composed ballads to create an unheard of sound. The disc opens with the title track, which is one of the best on the album, and continues to rock with tracks like Ultra Blue, which isn't as hard as the rest of the songs on the album but is a great change of pace. The disc concludes with T&C, which is by far the best and most powerful. Overall this is a very good CD, but there is a lot of filler, especially for such a short album. Personally, I thought The Illusion of Safety was a better overall album, but this is still a great buy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Hasn't Aged Well, June 26, 2011
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
This is a pretty good debut. It certainly shows the promise the band had (and would eventually deliver on). But there aren't an overwhelming amount of amazing songs here. And it sounds more dated every year. Loved it when it was initially released. I just can't get into it the way I used to. Perhaps I've just been spoiled by everything they've done since its release. To each their own. Definitely give it a chance.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Melodic Hardcore at it's finest, June 11, 2001
By 
"punkrawker1738" (Las Vegas, Nevada United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
Back in the late 90's, Thrice was one of my favorite hardcore acts. At their first show, I picked up a s/t ep with 5 songs on it. I was instantly hooked. I then got a Hopeless Records sampler called "2001:a punk oddity" where I heard the song "Identity Crisis". I couldn't belive it was them. Before, they were a band no one knew of, and now, they're on one of the biggest punk rock labels. I was excited to see how much they matured, and I wasn't let down a bit.

This cd blends the cruncing guitars and screamed vocals of hardcore, and the melodies of pop punk to make it even more original. With songs like "To What End", "Pheonix Ignition", and "T&C", you can't go wrong. A sure winner for fans of any kind of punk rock.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars strong cd, March 29, 2001
By 
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
This is is by far my favorite CD. It is a combination of passionate lyrics and techinicle sound that makes an extremely strong CD. Buy this CD you will not be dissipointed.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If you were to buy one CD this year make it this one, April 8, 2001
By 
This review is from: Identity Crisis (Audio CD)
In my opinion Thrice Identity Crisis is the future of melodic hardcore their lyrics with so much passion and their music with so much power I love this CD
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Identity Crisis
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