Two Tongues

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (35 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 35:10

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Please! the world needs more emo-pop!

GregorSansa

I can't believe how lame this is. The lack of innovation and original songwriting makes me really sad. Actually, what makes me really sad is the fact that many people think so highly of these Vans Warped Tour bands. they all sound the same.

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Amazing

rjrrzube

The collaboration of Chris Conley from Saves The Day and Max Bemis of Say Anything is one of the most ambitious powerpop albums in the 2000s. There is not one poor song on this album. This album is great for listeners of Saves The Day, Say Anything, Weezer, or any emo-pop band on Vans Warped Tour. Also the last song on the album, "Even If You Don't" is a cover of a great Ween song.

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They Say All Media Guide

Comprising members of Say Anything and Saves the Day, Two Tongues is a 21st century punk-pop dream team, complete with two able-voiced frontman and hefty helpings of angsty, rhythmic crunch. Max Bemis (the brainchild behind Say Anything’s musical mishmash) and Saves the Day’s Chris Conley may be unlikely partners, both of them boasting wildly different voices, but their give-and-take relationship is one of Two Tongues’ most endearing aspects. Taking strength in that duality, the band’s debut album covers a surprising amount of ground, from the requisite Warped Tour anthems (including the angsty opener, “Crawl”) to such ’90s alt rock throwbacks as “Don’t You Want to Come Home” and “Try Not to Save Me.” Throughout the album’s 13 tracks, Two Tongues embraces an older interpretation of emo music, prizing angular guitars and soft/loud dynamics over the genre’s newfound emphasis on pristine production and oversize pop choruses. That being said, there’s plenty of pop to be had here, particularly during the sugary, slaphappy verses of “Wowee Zowee.” Meanwhile, Eisley’s Sherri DuPree (who designed the album’s cover art) gives an uncredited performance on “Interlude,” her gorgeous vocals serving as a brief breather from the band’s heavy onslaught, while a cover of Ween’s “Even If You Don’t” serves as the album’s closer. Bemis and Conley may wield the most power here, but Two Tongues debut is a collaborative effort through and through, with the band taking measures to prove its debt to past traditions and present friends. – Andrew Leahey

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