Home
Wake Up Call
Barnes and Noble
Wake Up Call
Current price: $15.99


Barnes and Noble
Wake Up Call
Current price: $15.99
Size: CD
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
The Canadian rockers sixth studio long-player, the aptly named
Wake Up Call
finds
Theory of a Deadman
dialing back on the
Nickelback
-isms and delivering a streamlined (and nearly guitar-less) set of radio-friendly pop songs that favors genuine emotion over frat boy posturing. Frontman
Tyler Connolly
cites the procurement of a home piano and the revelation that "progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything" as mitigating factors in the group's newfound "wokeness," and the resulting 11-track set displays a level of lyrical maturity that has eluded the band since they first inked a deal with
Chad Kroeger
's
604 Records
in 2001. In ditching the post-grunge/alt-rock attack of prior outings,
TOADM
has unearthed a flair for crafting big pop bangers that split the difference between the glowstick and energy drink allure of
Imagine Dragons
and the agreeable, arena-sized trad-pop of
Coldplay
. ~ James Christopher Monger
Wake Up Call
finds
Theory of a Deadman
dialing back on the
Nickelback
-isms and delivering a streamlined (and nearly guitar-less) set of radio-friendly pop songs that favors genuine emotion over frat boy posturing. Frontman
Tyler Connolly
cites the procurement of a home piano and the revelation that "progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything" as mitigating factors in the group's newfound "wokeness," and the resulting 11-track set displays a level of lyrical maturity that has eluded the band since they first inked a deal with
Chad Kroeger
's
604 Records
in 2001. In ditching the post-grunge/alt-rock attack of prior outings,
TOADM
has unearthed a flair for crafting big pop bangers that split the difference between the glowstick and energy drink allure of
Imagine Dragons
and the agreeable, arena-sized trad-pop of
Coldplay
. ~ James Christopher Monger