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Everclear - Welcome to the Drama Club (CD)

Album Details: Welcome to the Drama Club

Release Date:09/12/2006
Label:Eleven Seven Music
UPC:846070007620

User Reviews: Welcome to the Drama Club

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    "Welcome........" A Welcome Into For New Everclear

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 15, 2006

    Pros: The songs sound like older Everclear, but anage to evolve as each song progresses. There are also some newer sounding songs.

    Cons: Fans may not like that a lot of the songs sound very familiar.

    Something old, something new, something used, something.....no wait, wrong thought. But it kind of applies to Everclear; or this incarnation of Everclear at least. Art Alexakis is back minus former members Greg Eklund and Craig Montoya--who were the ...original other members of Everclear. In their place, Alexakis is backed by four (yes four) new members--Brett Snyder (drums), Davey French (guitar), Sam Hudson (bass), and Josh Crawley (keyboards). "Welcome To The Drama Club" is an interesting first outing for this new incarnation of Everclear. Many of the songs have a sound similar to the original band's work. For instance, "Now" starts off sounding much like "Unemployed Boyfriend" (off the band's 2000 release, "Songs from An American Movie Vol. 1"). But the intro is the only similarity. The song immediately evolves into its own work from there on. "The Drama King" starts off much the same way, sounding like "Santa Monica" off the band's debut, "Sparkle and Fade". But again, it evolves into its own piece. And then there are tracks like "Hater" which sound like a b-side from 2003's "Slow Motion Dydream". Even with this, there is plenty of newer sounding material to go along with the new band in songs like album opener, "Under The Western Stars", Taste of Hell", "Portland Rain" and so many more. Even with a new band and label behind him, Alexakis has proved yet again, why Everclear is one of the most underrated and underappreciated bands in the business even if it is now Everclear in name only. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Welcome to the Drama Club

  • All Music Guide

    Art Alexakis always was, for all intents and purposes, Everclear, so the fact that he's the only remaining original member on the group's seventh album Welcome to the Drama Club doesn't really affect the sound of the band all that much: it's still the same melodic grunge that has defined the group since Sparkle and Fade. But where the Everclear on that 1995 debut was a lean power trio, the Everclear on Welcome to the Drama Club is a fullbodied quintet comprised entirely of pros and that includes Alexakis, too, who long ago left behind the taut rock roll that made "Santa Monica" a postgrunge classic. Like the twopart Songs from an American Movie the ambitious fourth and fifth album song cycles that derailed Everclear's commercial momentum this album finds a rock songwriter with lots of pop ambitions, dressing this record up with multitracked harmonies, swirling psychedelia, clavinets borrowed form '70s funk, occasional banjoes, and oodles of organs, and he now has a faceless but cra...ckerjack collection of pros to help execute his plan precisely. This makes Welcome to the Drama Club streamlined and crisp, and sometimes a little bit too orderly for its own good. It lacks both the gutlevel attack of his best mid'90s work and the endearing messiness of his turnofthecentury concept albums, which means it's not as compelling as the albums made by the original trio, since it never feels as immediate or human as that group. But even if Alexakis' new Everclear feels a little fussy a little too fussy for his songs, which display ambition but are always at their best when kept to their simplest he still remains an intriguing ball of contradictions with a gift for a hook. He remains leaden with his humor the sanctimonious "Hater" might be the worst offender here, but it has stiff competition from the likes of the selfmythologizing "A Shameless Use of Charm" but his hooks are still heavy and melodic, which makes Welcome to the Drama Club easy to listen to, even if it is too tidy. At the very least, the album proves that Alexakis is not only a pro, but a survivor: stripped of all his old bandmates and his old label, he's carrying on with music that is a worthy, logical successor to his original music, even if it's not quite as forceful, immediate or memorable. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Everclear

Though Everclear's Northwestern grunge-punk style was hardly revolutionary when the band became popular in 1995, the band's superb songs and Art Alexakis' us-against-them lyrics were taken to heart by bored Gen-X teens. Also elemental to Everclear's success is their obsessive touring schedule and agressive self-promotion.Art Alexakis (b. Apr. 12, 1962, West Los Angeles,... Read more