|
| Availability |
In Stock |
Price |
$4.00 |
| Condition |
Specials |
Format |
CD |
| Category |
Budget |
Style |
Alternative Progressive Rock |
In-Stock items usually ship within 72 hours. All orders are securely packaged and
shipped to arrive undamaged. If an item is defective, return it within 30 days
of purchase for a free replacement. Sorry, no credits, refunds, or exchanges.
 | 01 - Get Up |
 | 02 - December |
 | 03 - Plan To Pull Through |
 | 04 - Jaded Now |
 | 05 - Astronomy |
 | 06 - Living |
 | 07 - Nineteen |
 | 08 - Patience |
 | 09 - Breakthrough |
 | 10 - Tired Heart |
 | 11 - Moving On |
Their fifth recording was released on Tooth & Nail Records October, 2003. It is still typical Bleach fare, with lots of garage-y guitars and straightforward lyrics, a sort of rougher-around-the-edges Jimmy Eat World, a less muscular Denison Marrs, and hints of the geek-rock goodness of Weezer. Bleach members had no clue they were in for a big surprise when they entered the studio in April 2003 to record a new album. Suffering from writer's block and a tight studio deadline, the band literally got on their knees and asked God for the inspiration necessary to finish the album, which they intended to be about the joy of living the Christian life. The prayer was answered in the form of Astronomy, their second album with Tooth & Nail and fifth overall. But a tragic thing happened on the way to final production. The songs ended up darker-themed than the band had intended, and as it turns out, prophetically so. One day after finishing the final mixes, U.S. Army Captain Josh Byers—brother of guitarist Jared Byers and drummer Milam Byers—died while on duty in Iraq. After that, the band understood why some of the songs 'mysteriously' ended up with a more somber, meditative feel than originally intended. That somber tone is evident in the roots-rock track 'Tired Heart,' an acoustic composition written from Captain Byers' perspective as a song of comfort to his wife back home. Sonically it's a big departure from typical Bleach, verging on Southern rock and featuring some tasty guitar work from Jared highly reminiscent of Third Day's Mark Lee or renowned studio player Kenny Greenberg. The acoustic title track—a song about our Creator's control of the universe—features an effective, albeit typical, chord progression, and it's also a change of pace for Bleach. Other elements that may surprise listeners include the Zeppelin-esque guitar intro to 'Get Up,' and the latter half of 'Jaded Now,' which steps into classic rock mode with a searing guitar solo and spastic vocal performance by Davy Baysinger that'd make Zeppelin's Robert Plant proud. The rest of the album will sound more familiar to avid fans. The shouty 'Slober Rock' is a raw and energetic rocker reminiscent of Denison Marrs, while 'December' recalls the peppiness of The Juliana Theory's 'Understand the Dream Is Over.' 'Nineteen,' with its simple riffs and sunny harmonies, is vintage Bleach. And 'Plan to Pull Through' is equally good-spirited, with a structure similar to The All-American Rejects' 'Swing Swing,' but less poppy. Lyrically, the album is somewhat lightweight, tackling topics common to the Christian life—dying to self ('Living'), God loving us first ('Breakthrough'), and the temporary nature of problems ('Plan to Pull Through'). It was released on Tooth & Nail Records March, 2003. Songs include: 'Patience,' 'Get Up,' 'December,' 'Break Through,' 'Jaded Now,' 'Astronomy,' 'Plan To Pull Through,' 'Tired Heart,' 'Living,' 'Slobber Rock,' '19' and 'Got A Hold On Me.' 11 songs TT: 40:07 10-page insert w/lyrics
|