Alison and Brittany interviewed One Republic at Lynn University this afternoon. Great guys!
Tag Archives: the rock star stories
Roots Contest
Can you dig through Google and MySpace and find out what the names of the guys are in The Roots?
If you can—–you can win a special Roots T-Shirt and be entered to win tickets to The Roots performance in Boca Raton, Fla but you gotta get yourself here to go cause you’re not loony enough to expect us to fly you here right?
Enter to win by sending us an email info @therockstarstories.com and be sure to include your name and contact phone # so we can let you know if you win.
What We’ve Been Up To This Week!
Win Tickets to Avril Lavigne/Boys Like Girls 4-20 WPB
We’ve got 3 pairs of tickets to give away for next Sunday’s Avril Lavigne show at the Cruzan Amphitheater. All we want to know is “how is Avril’s last name really pronounced?” Just spell it our for us in an email to info (at) therockstarstories.com. We’ll let you know if you’ve won by Wednesday 5pm.
Ivoryline Review by Katya Ungerman
There Came A Lion
Tooth & Nail Records
Ivoryline’s There Came A Lion is no doubt the product of a post-punk generation. It’s the perfect picture of post-punk pop: loud, catchy, and tailored to appeal to high schoolers. Taking a gander at their MySpace, they describe their music as: “[The answer is] lucid and elegant” and continue to go on to say, “The Ivoryline Highway was constructed from an authentic love of music and listening to their songs makes you wonder where the notes begin and the cells of their body end.” I’m not sure if this is a joke, but to be honest, as a musician I would say the only reason one should purchase There Came A Lion is for its lyrical value.
What they lack in actual musical skill, they make up for in some pretty good lyrics. It’s not atypical of their genre (post punk inspired – whether they’re aware of it or not – Christian pop rock), but it’s something a little less obnoxious than what’s expected when you turn your radio to a Christian rock station. Instead of flamboyant displays of faith, it’s more poetic: our complacency won’t last much longer / an urgency will sweep, sweep, sweep / or sleep, sleep, sleeping hearts / our complacency won’t last much longer / an urgency will sleep.
While all too reminiscent of what you would find on a Fall Out Boy album or better yet The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus or Saosin (whose sounds are almost identical), it’s a big step for the type of music they’re writing, and you wouldn’t know it was Christian rock unless you were listening carefully. This can be both an advantage and a disadvantage, but over all, it opens up their audience to kids who wouldn’t be listening if they knew it was Christian rock.
Upon first listening to this album, I wasn’t impressed. I thought to myself, “Great, another bastardized version of some early post punk bands, another cheap knock-off of what Fall Out Boy was going to do.” Then I listened a little more carefully, and I was a little more accepting. This being said, it’s something that should stay on the radio. Don’t waste your money and buy this CD, because you probably own it. They’re not making much headway with an exception of their lyrics, which admittedly, are a notch above the rest, but Ivoryline’s There Came A Lion is too much so the picture of music today. IT’s nothing new – repetitive albeit catchy, clever but overdone, energetic but sort of obnoxious – in other words, every other new band out there.