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Written by Nick M.
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Friday, 05 September 2008 |
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Title: Then We Collide
Artist: Simeon
Independent
Framed, the last album from Australia's Simeon, was intriguing for its joie de vivre and its undateability, with its - unintentionally perhaps - 80s melodies and sounds. (If that seems overstated just listen to a song like Standing On The Mountain and then go listen to, say, Noiseworks.) There is some of that here - the track Don't Forget Where We've Been sounds like Icehouse or Simple Minds, and Jealous Lover has all the swagger of Bon Jovi - but, like how the 80s slid conventionally into the 90s, Then We Collide is more straight-forward, less awash with ideas. A song like I Can't Breathe is much closer to his contemporaries in the American Christian music scene, such as Mercyme. One gets the idea that Simeon is currently making music he feels he should make, rather than stamping an individual mark. When We Come Undone has a heavier blues-rock sound, like Jet or Black Crowes, but feels forced. Much of the album aims for the territory of Paul Colman or Nathan Tasker, without quite the same wit as Colman, or lightness of touch as Tasker. Wings Of Change is a song made up entirely of lyrical clichés. But this is being critical. Gently Move My Way is irresistible, with a level of propulsion Newsboys would be proud of, and some neat Joe Satriani guitar moments (those 80s again!). Satellite and High sound like they belong on Paul Colman Trio's One. Considering where he is now, for an Australian indie artist, one could do a lot worse than sounding like Paul Colman!
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