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He's abandoned the approach [strummy sing-alongs] long enough to realize its every nuance, and such prowess turns a plaintive ballad like 'The Widow's Peak' into something more timeless than a mere emo lament.
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These are full-band songs, with prominent piano, and it sounds more like guys playing in a room than the careful construct of a recording studio. That's a good thing.
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Complete with its complicated lead and sprinkles of string instruments, it lies in contrast to the simplicity and blithe spirit of the record's remaining half-hour--but joins the other 11 songs directly in the wheelhouse of the Dashboard Confessional fervent.
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A self-conscious return to Dashboard’s acoustic-troubadour roots. The good news is that the mellower sounds don’t come with mellower sentiments.
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Carrabba’s keening grandiloquence may have lost some of its most explicitly cathartic qualities, but The Shade of Poison Trees remains his best work in years.
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Even though Poison Trees loses some steam toward its conclusion, its maturity sets Dashboard Confessional back on track.
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Sometimes one suspects he’s saving his best tunes for the next full-band Dashboard Confessional album. But then comes 'Fever Dreams,' 150 addictive seconds of falsetto and drum machine. It’s reason enough to be hopeful about whatever’s coming next.
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SpinSure, there's hurt everywhere, but Carrabba sticks with the pain he knows. [Nov 2007, p.121]
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Even at their most tragic and at their angriest, most of the tracks on the album are calls to empathy in unexpected scenarios, feeling pain as a means of catharsis and in turn acknowledging the pain in others after turning inward. The results are amazingly beautiful.
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The Florida native's fifth disc seems less of a struggle for brand identity, but it's still scarred by past glories.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 5 out of 9
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Mixed: 4 out of 9
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Negative: 0 out of 9
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MikeB.Jun 26, 2008
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NicholasSNov 7, 2007
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SamS.Oct 18, 2007