Further Seems Forever - How to Start a Fire

7




Album Details

Title: How to Start a Fire
Artist: Further Seems Forever
Release Date: 2/11/2003
Re-Released On: 10/13/2003
Label: Tooth & Nail, Sorepoint
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 724353941826, 0724353941857, 5026535028727, 724353941857
Genre: Rock
Styles: Alternative/Indie Rock, Emo, Post-Hardcore
Moods: Earnest, Rousing, Volatile, Complex, Energetic, Fiery, Passionate, Raucous, Exuberant, Lively, Sentimental, Sprawling, Plaintive, Reverent, Reserved
Total Copies: 5
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. How to Start a Fire
  2. The Sound
  3. A Blank Page Empire
  4. Against My Better Judgement
  5. I Am
  6. Pride War
  7. On Legendary
  8. Insincerity as an Artform
  9. The Deep
  10. Aurora Borealis (In Long Form)

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDTooth & Nail39418
2003CDSorepoint007

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

In the time since the band's 2001 debut, The Moon Is Down, ex-Further Seems Forever vocalist Chris Carrabba took his Dashboard Confessional project from the top of the indie charts to the tingling nerve endings of female hearts everywhere. But while Carrabba's departure is notable, it hasn't left Further Seems Forever high and dry. Ex-Affinity shouter Jason Gleason has stepped behind the mike, and with his help FSF has turned in a focused and fiery sophomore effort. It's the emocore equivalent of singeing an ant with a sunbeam. The band's powerful appearance on a 2002 Weezer tribute was no joke. Further Seems Forever shows off a similar melodic sense here, channeling it into the familiar more More MORE! approach favored by Tooth & Nail's stable of two-guitar combos (think Juliana Theory) or Victory's Taking Back Sunday. Kicking off with the title cut, Gleason quickly establishes his talent for expanding the ends of lines until they shake and quiver like bowstrings. "Sound" might feature some of the year's best dynamics, shifting effortlessly from a rumbling post-hardcore verse to a harmony-drenched chorus that wouldn't be out of place on a Cheap Trick record. Throughout How to Start a Fire, FSF shows off a greater understanding of formula. Their sound incorporates all of the genre's commonalities, but rousing material like "Against My Better Judgement" stays on its toes even as the levels are maxed out. Guitars scream, solos appear and disappear, and drums dance around Gleason's opaque lyrics like a prizefighter. But even if the eventual dovetail is clear up ahead, that doesn't make it any less satisfying when it arrives. There is the occasional misstep. A line like "I am the water/I am waves crashing onto you" is somewhat problematic, since it's unclear whether the band is referencing its Christian beliefs or writing a particularly melodramatic love poem. "Insincerity as an Artform" is another point where Baroque lyricisms threaten to spring a leak in How to Start a Fire. But Further Seems Forever rights the ship with strong melody and enormous rock guitar, further establishing an identity separate from both its peers and the aftereffects of Carrabba's departure. [Some initial pressings of Fire were accompanied by a ten-song Tooth & Nail sampler.] ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Alan DouchesMastering
Alan FergusonPhotography
Bill PowerExecutive Producer, A&R
Brandon EbelExecutive Producer
Charlie Johnson & His Paradise BandA&R
Chris MillerEquipment Rental
David L. RankinIllustrations
Derick CordobaGuitar
Further Seems ForeverProducer, Art Direction, Design
James Paul WisnerGuitar, Producer, Engineer, Mixing, Keyboards
Jason GleasonVocals
Kris McCaddonDesign
Matt PikeBooking
Norma MendozaVocal Coach
Steve KleisathDrums