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While other trends fall by the way, corporate rock lives on the ropes, an assessment that should hardly cause Seven and the Sun any sleepless nights; just ask
Foreigner. The New Jersey trio's debut boasts that "every song counts." Judging from Neal Avron's slick, über-hip production, some nigh-perfect hooks, and vocalist Seven's overwrought,
Marc Anthony-meets-
Bono-at-the-Eurovision-Song-Finals vocal sense, that sounds like a promise that may turn out to be both figurative
and literal. Indeed, the band's initial single, the maddeningly catchy "Walk with Me," debuted not on MTV, but on the NBC daytime soap opera
Passions. Their music may be the pop equivalent of KFC, but these lads do marketing right. Most of the songs bristle with so much working-class romance and blue-collar hope that they just might make
Springsteen and
Mellencamp blush if they weren't delivered with such zealous, irony-free urgency. "Jump (The Velvet Rope)" even assures listeners that guys with multinational label deals are dreamers just like them--even when it's
you who's stuck on the wrong side of that velvet rope. All the elements are here to beat
Train and
Creed to the top of the CHR heap.
--Jerry McCulley
Product Description
Debut album from New Jersey based group produced by Neal Avron (Everclear, The Wallflowers). Featuring twin brothers/songwriters Walter and Bill Brandt and guitarist Eddie Zak. 11 tracks including the first single 'Walk With Me'. The CD is enhanced with bonus video for 'Walk With Me'. 2002.