We Are the Fallen - Tear the World Down

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RIYL

Evanescence
Lacuna Coil
Flyleaf
Within Temptation

Release Date

05/11/2010

Tracklist

1. Bury Me Alive
2. Burn
3. Paradigm
4. Don't Leave Me Behind
5. Sleep Well, My Angel
6. Through Hell
7. I Will Stay
8. Without You
9. St. John
10. I Am Only One
11. Tear The World Down

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Recent Ratings

Knowing that this group was a female fronted band that had members of Evanescence, Living Sacrifice, and Soul Embraced, I definitely had a pre-conceived notion of what this album would sound like—a bit of a heavier version of Evanescence. This was true on a few songs, but for the most part this band essentially is Evanescence.

It is going to be impossible to get through this review without comparing We Are the Fallen’s lead vocalist, Carly Smithson, to Evanescence’s Amy Lee so let’s tackle that right now. Does Carly sound extremely similar to Amy? Yes. Are the two nearly interchangeable. Yes. Is Carly better than Amy? Sort of. Carly seems to have a bit of a fuller voice, but her range is extremely similar to Amy’s and you could easily have her sing any Evanescence song and think it was Amy belting out the vocals. The only moment where you get any real differentiation is on the ballad “Sleep Well, My Angel” where Carly is able to put on a performance style that differs from most of Amy’s work. Unfortunately, this leads to some major issues for both Carly and the band, most notably that We Are the Fallen and Carly do not have their own identity.

Ben Moody and the rest of the band lay down a very familiar base of radio friendly hard rock with some “metal” tinges here and there. Songs like “Burn” and “Through Hell” have some edgy guitar tones that make the band feel somewhat heavy, but the bulk of the tracks are crafted in such a way that the band doesn’t have to take any risks. Using the standard hard rock template and pushing Carly’s vocals to the forefront gives nearly every song a radio-rock appeal which, as you would guess, also means the album is quite boring and formulaic. The focus is definitely on Carly at all times, so the rest of the band doesn’t necessarily need to do much more than lay down a nice background for her, but by doing so the dynamics are just not that dynamic.

Since the female-fronted hard rock band formula has seemingly run its course, it’s interesting that We Are the Fallen are sticking so stringently to a formula that feels quite dated. Not only did Evanescence wear out this sound, but so too did Lacuna Coil, In This Moment, Flyleaf, and Within Temptation. Each of these bands, as well as We Are the Fallen, suffer from a case of not being able to break out of a formula that is worn out and no longer popular.

We Are the Fallen should see some radio airplay and will appeal to many mainstream rock listeners, but they’re doing absolutely nothing new and what they are doing is a decent rehash of a dated sound at best, a boring retread of unpopular ideas at worst. Even with low expectations, Tear the World Down will struggle to meet them, which is unfortunate considering that We Are the Fallen had an opportunity to shake things up and take risks, but they simply chose not to.

--Rick Gebhardt

Author

Rick Gebhardt
Last updated: 06/30/2010 09:11AM

Comments

Nicholas
07/01/2010
12:14PM
Age: 30
Location
Baton Rouge

I hope this crap doesn't distract Rocky from LS.