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Sound The Alarm

Howie DayMP3 Download
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

Price: $9.99
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Album Savings: $3.60 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: September 8, 2009
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. So Stung 4:37 $1.29 Buy Track  - So Stung
Play   2. Weightless 3:57 $1.29 Buy Track  - Weightless
Play   3. Longest Night 3:35 $1.29 Buy Track  - Longest Night
Play   4. 40 Hours 3:33 $0.99 Buy Track  - 40 Hours
Play   5. Be There 3:52 $1.29 Buy Track  - Be There
Play   6. Everyone Loves To Love A Lie 4:02 $1.29 Buy Track  - Everyone Loves To Love A Lie
Play   7. Undressed 3:33 $1.29 Buy Track  - Undressed
Play   8. Sound The Alarm 3:52 $1.29 Buy Track  - Sound The Alarm
Play   9. No Longer What You Require 5:59 $1.29 Buy Track  - No Longer What You Require
Play 10. Postcard From Mars 4:48 $1.29 Buy Track  - Postcard From Mars
Play 11. Counting On Me 3:37 $0.99 Buy Track  - Counting On Me
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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Sound The Alarm is nothing more than ordinary, February 6, 2010
By 
JLB (Charlotte, NC) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sound The Alarm (Audio CD)
I have had this CD over a month now, and have tried really hard to like it. I loved Howie Day for years, and was very excited for a new album. However, this album is nothing more than okay and very unmemorable. There are a few good songs, "Be There" is catchy and I find myself singing to the lyrics of "Undressed" (even though humming the line, "I must confess I like us best undressed," while at work seems mildly inappropriate). But there is no song on this album that moves me. There is no song I feel that I have to listen to.

Howie Day is better than this. Previous album songs like, "Ghost,"She Says," "Collide," and "Brace Yourself"
have lyrics that speak to you and solid acoustic backdrops. These are songs I can listen to over and over again and still crave more. 'Sound The Alarm' lacks the same beauty and purity in the lyrics. Even the guitar sounds seem overdone and too much like the other pop-artists out there.

It is not horrible. I still am hopeful that Howie will be able to produce something better. It has been difficult to pinpoint what exactly I don't like about 'Sound The Alarm,' and the best answer I can come up with is that it simply lacks the passion and abandon felt on previous albums. If you are looking for something better, I would recommend Matt Nathanson's 'Some Mad Hope.'

Meanwhile, I will wait for the talented and inspiring Howie Day that I loved to return.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exactly What I Require, September 15, 2009
This review is from: Sound The Alarm (Audio CD)
I first became a Howie Day fan when I saw him live for the first of at least 30 times back at the University of New Hampshire. Being from out west, I hadn't heard of Howie yet--he was a young 18 year old, from nearby Bangor, Maine. I was hooked.

Since the release of his sophomore album, "Stop All The World Now," Howie had, frankly, let the success of "Collide" go to his head. He had fully soaked up all of the celebrity entitlement symptoms. For long time fans like myself, it became annoying. He was, supposedly, popping pills and absolutely hitting the bottle--I'd seen a couple of shows where he was just boozing like crazy, it was sad and disgusting.

There were a lot of high profile issues he brought onto himself, and I was hoping that the 6 year delay to release "Sound the Alarm" was due to his desire and not due to him just not getting around to it. Hearing some of his new stuff live, I was impressed. Hearing the previews on iTunes and Amazon, I was worried. With the finished product, it sounds a lot less produced than I'd feared, and Howie has hit the bullseye.

To be honest, there are two tracks that I don't quite like. "Be There" is much better live than the pop sounding finished product from the studio, and "Undressed" hits me as being a filler, way out of place. I always thought Howie and Graham Colton could do something cool together, but I'm disappointed with the result. Even "Postcard From Mars," which was at first listen way too bizarre for me, is far and away more preferred to those tracks.

Howie has never been the type of artist I like being surrounded by Avril Lavigne and Fall Out Boy on a pop radio station--with "Collide" that's what it was. Six years later he couldn't be further away from the pop friendly sound, and more like his authentic self. Aside from the two tracks mentioned, the rest of them are gems in their own right. "So Stung" is a hauntingly unique sound to open up the album and hook you in. "Longest Night" is another stand-out track, with the best hook of the entire set... you'll surely be singing along. The title track is piano based on the album, but he generally plays his trusted Takamine live, and they both sound fantastic. There are also two finger picked songs on the album, something Howie isn't necessarily known for. "40 Hours" grows on me with each listen, just a lovely song, very well crafted, and then the absolute standout track of not just the album, but of his entire life's work, is "No Longer What You Require." He has never come this close to a perfect song, and that says a lot given songs like "Ghost" or "Madrigals."

The album on the whole is very relateable. He's obviously written about a lot of heavy issues, from his real life experiences. On the surface, he's learned from his mistakes and his music has matured because of what he has lived. Thankfully, it seems like Howie has got his feet firmly placed back on the ground (you like that, playing on "Everyone Loves to Love a Lie"), his head square on his shoulders, and it's damn good to have Howie Day back. This album was exactly what I required.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Howie Day Returns Strong From Extended Hiatus with "Sound The Alarm", September 8, 2009
This review is from: Sound The Alarm (Audio CD)
More than six years since his last release, Bangor native Howie Day returns with his third full-length studio effort "Sound The Alarm." During these six years, Day experienced a rollercoaster of events, ranging from the highest of highs (the breakout multi-format radio success of 2004's "Collide") to the lowest of lows (various run-ins with the law eventually leading up to his admission into a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center). With "Sound The Alarm," Howie Day explores the depths of these experiences in his most personal release to date. The album plays out as such:

1. So Strung- 8/10
Solid slow moving number with haunting melancholy synths echoing throughout the chorus.

2. Weightless- 8/10
Midtempo piano-driven number that is very catchy. Solid backing vocals during the buildup to the chorus.

3. Longest Night- 10/10
For those who enjoyed "Collide," this is the closest to it you will find on "Alarm." An emotional ballad paired with beautiful lyrics make this an album standout. The verses build up nicely to an uplifting chorus. This is a sure-fire single, and in all likelihood will have Howie Day receiving lots of spins at radio in the coming months.

4. 40 Hours- 8/10
Acoustic guitar driven ballad that employs solid backing vocals and a very pleasant chorus.

5. Be There- 9/10
The first single off the album, this uptempo number is a song Day has been playing since his "Stop All The World Now" tour in 2004. This is an extremely catchy and lyrically strong tune that has been gaining steam at Hot Adult Contemporary radio formats as of late as a result.

6. Everyone Loves To Love A Lie- 8/10
A piano-driven fan favorite that was first released on Day's Myspace page over a year ago, this midtempo tune builds up nicely to a soaring sing-a-long chorus.

7. Undressed- 7/10
A genuine feel-good song, a style that has been absent from other previous Howie Day releases. This tune is pleasant enough with some solid backing vocals, but it doesn't connect as well as the ballads on the album.

8. Sound The Alarm- 8/10
Another piano-driven haunting tune that employs extremely personal lyrics and an on-point emotional delivery. This song has a lot of potential to grow on the listener.

9. No Longer What You Require- 10/10
The second best song on the album, and perhaps the most personal of all tracks. Day recites in the chorus:
"Hey, I could have told you that I loved you and stayed,
Around to kindle the fire but I was late,
On my return and now you've lost all fate,
And I am the liar, I'm no longer what you require."
Beautiful backing vocals, haunting acoustic guitar pickings throughout, an amazing buildup to a full-band finish... this is a true gem.

10. Postcard From Mars- 6/10
Midtempo number that is just not as solid as the other tracks on "Sound The Alarm."

11. Counting On Me- 8/10
A solid midtempo album closer that starts off hauntingly slow with just Day and an acoustic guitar before building up to a full-band powerful finish.

"Sound The Alarm" is a step in the right direction for Howie Day that is sure to please old fans while attracting a whole new crop of listeners as well. After battling many personal demons, one can only hope that Howie Day has shaken off the problems of his past and that it won't be another six years before we hear from this extremely talented musician again.
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