Disciple – Horseshoes & Handgrenades

Disciple

is a Dove award winning five piece band from Knoxville, Tennessee. I would compare them to bands such as and , using a heavy rock and southern metal sound. This Christian outfit has been around a lot longer than one would think, having formed way back in 1992. Hard to believe that was almost twenty years ago isn’t it? I was born in 1992…and now you all feel old! Anyway, having been around that long, has released quite a few albums in their time. I gave some of their older work a few listens, and it is obvious has developed their sound quite a lot over the years, and the change shows in their latest album Horseshoes & Handgrenades. Now… whether it’s for better or for worse is difficult to decide, and will be up to the listener’s opinion.

There is no doubt that Horseshoes & Handgrenades is a fun listen. I remember sitting around with my friends and listening to their album Scars Remain, bobbing our heads to the catchy riffs and sing-along style lyrics. Horseshoes & Handgrenades doesn’t disappoint in that area, just about every track contains sweet guitar riffs, impressive drum work, and catchy choruses. Opening the album is the first single, “Dear X, You Don’t Own Me”, a passionately written song to pain, shame, hate and anger. This song is obviously written to make the radio, with a “raise your hands and shout your lungs out” type chorus, and an inspiring melody. While this isn’t necessarily a bad thing, it doesn’t bring anything new to the table, and its purposeful radio friendliness is all too apparent. And I felt that way about several of the songs on Horseshoes & Handgrenades.

Following “Dear X”, is the heavier “Watch It Burn”, which sounds like it could be straight from a album. Even though I enjoyed it the song itself, the blatant similarity was distracting. The fourth song on the album, “The Ballad of St. A”, is the heaviest song on the album, and my personal favorite. It starts with war-like drums, and then cuts to a shattering breakdown, with pounding double kick, and chugging guitars. It lifts you up midway, and throws you back down with a final, and extremely impressive breakdown. An obvious crowd motivator. Other songs like “Shot Heard ‘Round The World” and “Battle Lines” also provide metalheads, like myself, a heavier, headbanging sound.

The biggest problem I had with this album is inconsistency; it starts off radio friendly with the first track, then goes into heavier sound. Only to once again go back to radio friendly “Invisible”. When I wanted it to stay heavy, it would soften up, and vice-versa. Only a few songs stuck out to me as reminiscent of their albums Scars Remain and Back Again. Some were painfully generic, such as “Remedy”, which sounds similar to . They use an “orchestra” to give it “epicness”, which is largely overused in my opinion. Songs tended to blend together in the middle of the album and only had a handful of standout tracks. Possibly the best ballad on the album is “Worth the Pain”, the album closer. The piano behind Kevin Young singing “It’s worth the pain” is beautiful, and the arrangement of this song is just awesome.

Though Horseshoes & Handgrenades doesn’t provide anything revolutionary to the genre, there’s no doubt are talented musicians. Kevin Young’s lyrics have matured significantly, and Trent Reiff’s drum work is impressive. Andrew Welch and Micah Sannan certainly know their way around their guitars. isn’t the heavy rock/southern metal sound they were in previous albums, and occasionally come across as generic in Horseshoes & Handgrenades. Nevertheless, the album is still fun to listen to with its uplifting lyrics and sound that pleases the ears. It won’t disappoint diehard fans, and it will certainly attract new ones.

Horseshoes & Handgrenades
Rating: 3.5/5
3.5/5
Horseshoes & Handgrenades

Tracklist

01. Dear X, You Don't Own Me
02. Watch It Burn
03. Invisible
04. The Ballad Of St. A
05. Shot Heard 'Round The World
06. Collision
07. Battle Lines
08. Remedy
09. Eternity
10. Revolution: Now
11. Deafening
12. Worth The Pain

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Though Horseshoes & Handgrenades doesn't provide anything revolutionary to the genre, there's no doubt Disciple are talented musicians."

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15 Comments

  1. avatar Josh Velliquette says:

    August 19th, 2010 at 7:02 pm

    Welcome to the party, Jonathan. Nice review. These guys must be doing something right if they've stayed in existence for 21 years. I remember enjoying the first song off this album but haven't given it much of a listen past that. Either way, nice work.

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    Jonathan Anderson replied:

    Thanks man. Yeah, they are pretty awesome. I just found this album to be a little too "typical" to give a higher rating…at much as I would have liked to. Great to be here =D

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  2. avatar Anthony Gannaio says:

    August 19th, 2010 at 10:58 pm

    Welcome to the family man! Great review, and from the samples, I agree. I'm sure you'll fit in just fine. :)

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    Jonathan Anderson replied:

    Thanks dude. =D

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  3. avatar Jonathan Anderson says:

    August 19th, 2010 at 11:11 pm

    On a side note, that dude looks like Tom Cruise.

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    Jen replied:

    HOLY CRAP. You are right!

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  4. avatar Lee says:

    August 20th, 2010 at 6:53 am

    Great job on the review Jonathan. Having listened to these guys since their inception, I have to say that this is definitely one of my favorites. This album is no slouch either. There are some pretty heavy (for Disciple) tracks on this bad boy.

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    Jonathan Anderson replied:

    Thanks =]. Yeah there definitely are…especially The Ballad of St. A…man that one is nuts! I really wanted to give it more like a four…but there wasn't an option for 3.8 haha. I just thought that some of it didn't quite sound as original as some of their other stuff has…maybe I'm just biased cause i love Scars Remain so much!

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  5. avatar marc says:

    August 20th, 2010 at 1:22 pm

    A much more mature sound for them but stll very enjoyable.

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  6. avatar tpislegend says:

    August 20th, 2010 at 11:03 pm

    these guys are awesome live. i liked this post, bro- i listened to the "dear x" song i get what you mean about the "radio-friendly" stuff. i was hella hoping this cd would be heavier but i guess not. bummer.

    peace

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    Josh Velliquette replied:

    "Battle Lines" is a pretty rockin' tune.

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    Jonathan Anderson replied:

    heck yeah! "With a bloody fist raised to the sky!" =D one of my favs.

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  7. avatar Zerosignal says:

    August 22nd, 2010 at 8:38 am

    This sounds like your standard rock band to me.

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  8. avatar Booger700 says:

    January 3rd, 2011 at 11:07 pm

    Great review. Been a fan a these Jesus freaks for awhile. New album not as good as the others but still great.

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  9. avatar Caleb says:

    January 21st, 2011 at 5:15 pm

    This album's pretty sick! Some of their songs do sound relatively generic, but overall the album is very heavy. If you preordered the album from the band's website, you could've also downloaded the B-Sides to the CD…which in my opinion should've made the final cut. Every song from the B-Sides is very intense and heavier than nearly all the tracks on the release…except the last track "Remake" which is appropriately "soft" since it's mainly about one's faith and worshiping God. I think you can find the B-Sides on YouTube if you look 'em up. But hey, sweet review! You definitely know your music =D

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