Search - Stellar Kart :: Expect The Impossible

Expect The Impossible
Stellar Kart
Expect The Impossible
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Christian & Gospel
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1


     
8

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Stellar Kart
Title: Expect The Impossible
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Word Entertainment
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 2/26/2008
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Christian & Gospel
Styles: Hardcore & Punk, Pop & Contemporary, Rock & Alternative
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 080688729622, 080688729660

Similarly Requested CDs

 

Member CD Reviews

Jill G. from LIVONIA, MI
Reviewed on 8/29/2010...
Awesome CD!
0 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Doug S. (Dstelt) from WISC RAPIDS, WI
Reviewed on 3/14/2010...
Love this cd, all the songs are catchy and have it in my car cd player alot!!

CD Reviews

Best Album by Stellar Kart
Kevin R. Davis | Perkasie, PA | 10/20/2008
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Stellar Kart is an interesting Rock-Punk band. The mid 2000's has seen fellow rockers Hawk Nelson, Eleventyseven and The Rocket Summer emerge in an attempt to appeal to the wide success of influencer Relient K. Clearly Stellar Kart and Hawk Nelson are still striving to improve and although the songs are ear candy, they don't really challenge you like their great influencer. However, if you liked Relient K's first three albums before their breakout success MmHmm, then you should enjoy Expect The Impossible.



Innocent, The Right One and I Give Up are prime examples of nice melodic songs with not too much substance. Dove Award Winning Producer Ian Eskelin has produced an accessible album and his influence appears more on a couple of the stand-out songs Pray and Sunshine, both uplifting tracks sounding somewhat like early All Star United, which is promising. The first single Jesus Loves You is in essence another re-write of the big hit Me and Jesus. The song I keep coming back to is Shine Like The Stars based on Philippians 2:14-16. The song actually starts and ends with a 1980's style synthesizer intro like Van Halen along with the next song Eyes. A bit more substance than the first two albums and the best overall album by Stellar Kart in my opinion.

"
Good, But Very Short
Cory T. Shaeffer | Pittsburgh | 02/26/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This album is a step in somewhat of a new direction for Stellar Kart, as there are a number of poppy tracks mixed in with the occasional pop-punk throwback. My two complaints are the length of the CD, only 10 tracks and about 30 minutes of music, plus there are a couple of tracks that sound like Linkin Park, which is just not a good sound for this band. The sunny pop of "Innocent" to begin the record is classic Stellar Kart, and the ballad "Jesus Loves You" proves that these guys write and sing the songs they feel in their hearts as opposed to some corporate, mainstream spit-shined glossy band who only does what their record label tells them to do. "Automatic" is another song with lots of hooks and guitars. Despite the length of the album, there are enough hooks in the upbeat anthem "Sunshine" and the guitar-studded pop punk of "The Rigt One" (which recalls MxPx even moreso than track #4 on their previous CD) to keep the appetite of their fans satisfied. This band continues to gradually improve, but one does get the feeling that they have not quite hit their peak yet on their three albums to date."