The Heavy’s sound has always been an indie
or alternative rock sound that blended soul/blues/RNB with Rock so well which is
why they were drawn to me. Their 2nd album “The House That Dirt Build” was the album to put them on the map with songs like “How You Like Me Now?” and “Short Change Hero” to name some. Those two songs have been used in
countless forms of media like TV shows, movies, video games and commercials.
They followed up those hit songs with another “What Makes a Good Man?” from
their 3rd album “The Glorious Dead”. That album peaked at #191 on
the Billboard 100.
They then took a step backwards in
releasing an album just to release one in “Hurt & Merciless”. It did not
have the soul and feeling of the previous albums’ creativity and passion. There
was too much over-saturation with most of the tracks that sound so similar it’s
difficult to distinguish one from another. The horn section ruined most of the
songs which buried too much of the great lead vocals of Kelvin Swaby.
We can all be glad their new album their
fifth “Sons” tries to make up for the previous album. It has them trying to
sound like they recaptured the same magic they had before with a compilation of
catchy songs that make for a good but not great addition to The Heavy’s booming
discography. They hit you right away with “Heavy for You” that has amazing
guitar work that gets you amped up for the rest of the album. They also end it
well with “Burn Bright” a nice emotional beautiful sounding soulful song.
The issue with the album is how they
structure the order of the songs when three of their best songs are at the end especially
their best song being the 2nd to last song. “What Don’t Kill You” is their
best song on the album and would better in the beginning or in the middle to
break up some of the average songs. It has the same feel of their previous big
hits where you will remember the chorus with it being super catchy with a good
story being told, which why it is the best song. Another great track is “Better
as One” which has a good alt rock feel and serves as a rallying cry for peace
and unity written by front man Kelvin Swaby after the violent events that
occurred in Charlottesville in 2017.
The tracks “Thief”, ”Fire”, “Put the Hurt
on me” and “Fighting for the Same Thing” have the great sound of their older
tracks by blending that RNB/Blues so well with Rock that it sounds like their
catchy songs from the previous albums. The clunker of this album is “Simple
Things” it has its RNB style but it sounds too funky with it sounding like a
bad disco dance song so this is one song to avoid. They make up for it by
having a good sounding rock song come right after it called “A Whole Lot of
Love” not to be confused with the Led Zeppelin song. The remaining song is
called “Hurt Interlude” that is in the middle of the album to break things up,
and don’t get me wrong, it sounds like a great RNB song. The issue is it would
be better as an intro to start off the album because it gets lost in the middle
because it has a similar style like the three songs that come before it and one
right after.
Overall this album has 6-7 good to great
songs and 3-4 average songs with only one clunker, which means they did make up
for a clunker of an album from the last one. Some of the same issues that
plagued the previous album was it didn’t have the same feel as the other two
that they can’t remember what made them popular in the first place. It just
does not live up to the other two but that is ok to have a good album but not a
great album. Most artists fail to even make more than one good album and they
now have two good albums to go with their two great albums, so let’s just move on
and forgot that their 4th album ever existed. “Sons” is definitely
an album to listen to even if you are not a huge fan of “The Heavy” just
because of how catchy the songs are.
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