Crossfade - Crossfade

10




Album Details

Title: Crossfade
Artist: Crossfade
Release Date: 4/13/2004
Label: Columbia
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto, Enhanced CD-ROM
UPC: 696998714823
Genre: Rock
Style: Post-Grunge
Moods: Earnest, Melancholy, Volatile, Aggressive, Bittersweet, Boisterous, Rousing, Tense/Anxious, Dramatic, Gritty, Raucous, Slick, Yearning
Total Copies: 17
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Starless
  2. Cold
  3. So Far Away
  4. Colors
  5. Death Trend Setta
  6. The Deep End
  7. No Giving Up
  8. Dead Skin
  9. Disco
  10. The Unknown

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2004CDColumbia87148

Other Editions

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Album Review

Hometown Crossfade fans will recognize the majority of this eponymous major-label debut, as it's been retooled from the band's self-released 2001 effort, when they were still known as Sugardaddy Superstar. Columbia's signing of the band makes sense, as Crossfade combines the most marketable elements of Nickelback and P.O.D. (check "No Giving Up"), throwing in the brooding aggression of Cold and Disturbed as bonus glue. Its occasional flirtation with synths and sampling is negligible, as discordant guitars dominate the album's mix. Speaking of cold, that's also the name of the 'Fade's first single. Ed Sloan has a powerful voice, and he sells the track's somewhat generic chorus ("What I really meant to say/Is that I'm sorry for the way I am") by really lighting into the melody. He goes on to apologize for his "screwed-up side" as dull power chords lurch in the background. "So Far Away" and "Disco" follow a similar formula, marrying thick, glowering riffs to rousing choruses; that Disturbed feel really drifts in on the latter, where you half expect an "Oh wah ah ah ah!" yawp after its payoff chorus chant. Crossfade actually runs into trouble with tracks like this or "Death Trend Setta," where they try too hard to soak their considerable rock power in played-out angry guy raps. The band is more successful with cuts like "Starless," the aforementioned "Cold," or even the atmospheric "Deep End," where Sloan hits huge vocal hooks over serviceably powerful riffs. "Dead Skin" is another relative highlight of Crossfade. Musically it's an awkward facsimile of Staind's embittered melodrama, but its tale of addiction and relationship destruction feels like the record's emotional core. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Brian GeigerDrums, Group Member
Bryan GallantAssistant
CrossfadeArt Direction, Producer, Engineer
Doug FordA&R
Ed SloanGuitar, Vocals, Group Member
Matt PinfieldA&R
Mick RockPhotography
Mitchell JamesVocals (Background), Group Member, Guitar (Bass)
Randy StaubMixing, Engineer
Tony ByroadsTurntables, Vocals (Background), Group Member, Sampling, Vocals