Horrorscope

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Horrorscope album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 41:04

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A Turn to Alternative

PaleolithNick

Eve 6 was only in the punk vein on their first album. This album is straight-up alternative rock. Except for, "Here's to the Night," it's all catchy beats, creative hooks, and tongue-twisting lyrics.

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punk-pop, really???

jhavener

I loved these guys from the beginning, but always thought they were rock (maybe a little on the alternative side cuz they weren't quite so mainstream sounding--which I loved--), but I never realized they were being labeled as 'punk' with all the other post-punk/pop bands until I read it a few years after their first album (this being my fave, then #3, then #1--well not counting their unreleased debut under the name eleventeen.) It's really too bad they fell thru the cracks & broke up, cuz they were one of the more original sounding 'punk' bands out there! ps--the version of this with their john denver cover is a must have for fans!

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They Say All Music Guide

Eve 6 was naturally tossed into the mid-’90s hutch of generic post-grunge alterna-rock (think Everclear, Third Eye Blind, Marcy Playground). Their 1998 self-titled debut went platinum thanks to the heavy spin of single “Inside Out.” Their brash attitude was certainly apparent, cheeky pop rock was in the full throw, and two years later Eve 6 mold their fiery rock demeanor once again on Horrorscope. It’s another conventional rock record, thrashing guitar hooks and throbbing basslines are in place, but frontman Max Collins has lyrically improved. There isn’t anything intellectually impressive and the hyperactive little boy excitement is still present, but a lush sweet side also shines through, specifically on songs like “Here’s to the Night.” The swooning ballad-esque look doesn’t last long, for the dozen song set list is primarily hard rock layers of old school metal rock. “Rescue” is vibrant and twitching, glossed with electronic tinges, and “On the Roof Again” is the typical post-break up swan song cast for the pop kids leading the millennial punk revival. It’s a nice switch from the angst-ridden insensibility of rockers like Fred Durst and the frilly fluff of the Britneys and Christinas. Horrorscope is a decent move for Eve 6, no slumping nor skyrocketing. And like their modern pop/rock counterparts, Eve 6 keep it basic. [Horrorscope was also released in a "clean" edition, containing no profanities or vulgarities.] – MacKenzie Wilson

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