In the Valley of Dying Stars

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (85 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 46:21

eMusic Review

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Stacy Mangual

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A great slice of catchy southern rock.
2000 | Label: Arena Rock Records

Perhaps best known for their hook-filled "Sucked Out," Superdrag's In the Valley of Dying Stars, is a great slice of catchy southern rock. The first line of the album, "I want rock & roll but I don't want to deal with the hassle," might explain John Davis 'new solo career singing Christian rock, but this album really is pure rock & roll. The songs are full of great crunchy guitars, catchy melodies and intertwining harmonies. Davis 'voice is a bit gritty at times, which only adds to the emotion and rock vibe. Though the album is mostly fast paced, the ballad "The Warmth of a Tomb" is one of its standout tracks, showcasing the band's songwriting abilities through complex guitar work.

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Superdrag's best

schmo

This is the only Superdrag CD that does not have a weak song on it. Regretfully Yours was the CD that got me hooked, but that pails in comparison. They had some good songs after this, but whole CD's could never come close to this one.

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amazing album

jimmydelarme

This is a just a great album of straight ahead rock. I consider it a classic of my collection. My favorite songs are tracks 1,2, 3, and 10 some people thing this band gets a little monotonous but I completely disagree.

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A classic, plain and simple

UtahMan

This was the first full length album I ever downloaded from emusic, and a couple hundred albums later it's one of my top three. This album isn't great on every track, but the tracks that are great are all-time greats, and the filler is solid. No chance you'll be disappointed with this one.

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O.K.

thelastleaf

Lots of great reviews for this album, but I think there's better power pop stuff on emusic (Brendan Benson and Josh Fix come to mind). This kind of reminds me of the Foo Fighters a bit, with a couple punk-lite tracks. Not bad, but not great, although I seem to be in the minority.

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Fantastic!

ColdFingaz

Superdrag's best, and a masterpiece of it's genre. Great songs that rock, roll and drag you into their various narratives. John Davis is really a great writer, and this record is loaded with emotion and intensity. Contrary to a previous poster, the recording sounds great to me. Play it loud!

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Unique and incredible

arparrish

I was first introduced to Superdrag through John Davis' (lead singer) solo CD--which is amazing and I highly recommend you pick it up. This CD is equally incredible. Raw is a word that is overused in music reviews but truly fits this recording. The sound is raw and unique. The lyrics are provoking and poetic. Highly recommend!

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good stuff

Supercraig

Still hangs in there for one of my desert island albums- absolute classic. Try it out, you won't be sorry. Damn I wish they would get back together..

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Up the Vocals!

PaleolithNick

I love the songwriting here, and the instrumentations and melodies are great. Very catchy, very expressive. But does it make me a bad indie rock fan to wish they'd lifted the vocals a little bit higher in the mix? Most of these tracks would sound muddy on a *lo-fi* record. Still, "Unprepared," is one of the all-time greatest rock'n'roll songs, and I'm not sure why it didn't hit *big time* for them.

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They Say All Media Guide

Superdrag’s third proper album (there are a couple of singles compilations as well) begins with this lyric: “I want rock and roll, but I don’t want to deal with the hassle.” Perhaps the line references the Knoxville, TN, band’s major label roller coaster ride that began with a decent-sized radio hit (“Sucked Out”) and ended in the usual way: Trends changed, the band made a follow-up record that didn’t sell as well, and then it was dropped by Elektra. Other than that lyric, though, nothing would indicate that any of the business end of the music business had affected the hooky power pop band. In the Valley of Dying Stars is a solid, terrific sounding album; the mix is great, the songs are great, and the guitars crunchingly complement singer John Davis’ songs exactly as they should. The songs on Valley are among the best written by the band, from the typically rocking “Keep It Close to Me” to the more subtle “The Warmth of a Tomb.” While the band may never again attain the level of popularity it reached with Regretfully Yours, it should still inspire a legion of fans devoted to solid, hooky pop songs. – Josh Modell

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