Blue October - Foiled
CD
Performer
 
Title
 
Foiled
Guest Artists
 
UPC
 
60249851857
Genre
 
Rock & Pop
Released
 
04/04/2006
List Price $13.92
Our Price $12.53
You Save $1.39
Track Listing - click icons to preview tracks in Windows Media Player.
1
Windows Media MuzeTune
What If We Could
2
Windows Media MuzeTune
She's My Ride Home
3
Windows Media MuzeTune
Into the Ocean
4
Windows Media MuzeTune
You Make Me Smile
5
Windows Media MuzeTune
Hate Me
6
Windows Media MuzeTune
Let It Go
7
Windows Media MuzeTune
X-Amount of Words
8
Windows Media MuzeTune
Congratulations - (featuring Imogen Heap)
9
Windows Media MuzeTune
Drilled a Wire Through My Cheek
10
Windows Media MuzeTune
Sound of Pulling Heaven Down
11
Windows Media MuzeTune
Everlasting Friend
12
Windows Media MuzeTune
18th Floor Balcony
Notes / Reviews

This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.
Blue October: Justin Furstenfeld (vocals); CB Hudson (guitar); Ryan Delahoussaye (violin); Matt Noveskey (bass guitar); Jeremy Furstenfeld (drums).
Texas outfit Blue October have been gaining notoriety since the late 1990s with their brand of eclectic alt rock. 2006's FOILED builds on the band's past accomplishments, and represents one of their most focused and ambitious efforts. "Hate Me," the album's first single, shows that Blue October are no strangers to catchy, radio-ready songcraft, a quality that helps endear the group to many.
Yet Blue October are admirably restless, and seldom rely on formula. FOILED also ranges from subtle and introspective numbers ("18th Floor Balcony") to edgy hard rockers ("Drilled a Wire Through My Cheek") to electro-dance ("X Amount of Words"), making for a rock album with dimension, polish, and substance.
Three years since Blue October's last studio album, Foiled keeps true to the eclectic mix of passionately delivered post-grunge that has built the band a core of loyal fans over the years. And while it's this eclectic quality that allows Blue October to sneak successful singles to the top of modern rock charts, the somewhat challenging nature of their music is also what seems to keep them from really staying in the mainstream spotlight. After all, many of the same people who would eat up the soaring "Hate Me" -- which was gathering considerable momentum on radio before Foiled's release -- might not comprehend the rest of the album compared to their copies of the latest from Nickelback and Alter Bridge. They may enjoy the up and down nature -- from introspective brooding to straightforward rock -- that appears on "What If We Could," but the album's highlights come in the moments when the band doesn't rely on in-your-face tactics to get its point across. The often desolate and anguished nature of Justin Furstenfeld's lyrics complement his aching voice, which still comes off as a self-aware, less pious Ed Kowalczyk, along with Ryan Delahoussaye's affecting violin. As such, while "Hate Me" is the catchy, more formulaic song of the album, his distraught confrontation of the personal selfishness that apparently ruined a past love makes the song work beyond radio accessibility. Sheesh, every jilted girlfriend of a messed-up relationship should be so lucky as to have a remorseful guy outwardly admit sentiments like "Kicking shadows on the street for every mistake that I had made/And like a baby boy I never was a man." The dark "Drilled a Wire Through My Cheek" explores Furstenfeld's somewhat split personality with a crunchy rap/rock chorus that contrasts the funk guitar of calmer, introspective sections. On the lighter side, "Everlasting Friend" is a warmly executed, piano-laced delight that hints, along with the intimate "18th Floor Balcony," that the often broken frontman still holds hope close. Things get a little hairy, however, on the deviating "X Amount of Words." A New Order-ish techno beat leads the song's delivery into realms similar to -- no, seriously -- Ciara's "Goodies" with occasional background vocals appearing with a likeness to Linkin Park's Chester Bennington; but at least the sheer weirdness of the song makes it admittedly fun. Overall, Foiled is a multifaceted effort that delivers more than History for Sale and, thus, should delight fans with its arrival. Whether or not the mainstream is now ready for Blue October has yet to be determined. ~ Corey Apar

Details
Performers
 
Producer
 
Label
 
Universal Distribution
Catalog #
 
0006262
SPAR Code
 
n/a
Year of Original Release
 
2006
Mono/Stereo
 
Stereo
Studio/Live Performance
 
Studio
Distributor
 
Universal Distribution
# of Discs
 
1