Music review: Rob Thomas – ‘The Great Unknown’
On his third solo effort, Rob Thomas covers familiar ground found on his previous solo releases as well as material from his own band.
As the frontman for Matchbox Twenty, the Florida band became a pop-rock staple from 1996 to 2012 by releasing a palpable collection of mainstream rock that featured catchy riffs, infectious choruses and memorable melodies.
As a solo artist, Thomas blends pulsating dance grooves and snappy sing-along choruses dripping with pop sensibilities. “The Great Unknown” is a well-crafted collection that displays Thomas’ passion to deliver arrangements with a diverse sound and appeal.
“I Think We’d Feel Good Together” opens the album in rousing fashion. The energetic arrangement is a guilty pleasure that draws you in with soaring electronic synth and a flirtatious dance mix infused with a heavy flavoring of Maroon 5ĢƵ sexy style.
“Trust You,” co-written with OneRepublicĢƵ Ryan Tedder, serves as the lead single and follows with more techno influence smothered in a radio-friendly format that lingers in your head long after the melody ends. The signature sound offered by Matchbox Twenty is found on the sweet-sounding tracks “Hold On Forever,” “One Shot” and “Heaven Help Me,” while the title track is an inspirational and atmospheric number penned by Thomas highlighting the strength and grace of his wife.
One of the biggest surprises on the album can be heard on “Paper Dolls.” The haunting track about a destructive and crumbling relationship features Ruth-Anne Cunningham. “Better not look down/Cause itĢƵ gonna be a long way to fall/This is our last chance/And itĢƵ everything or nothing at all,” ominously warns the Irish singer with an engaging voice reminiscent of Amy Lee of Evanescence.
The finest moment of the release comes on the closing “Pieces.”
The fragile ballad brings things to a simplistic and moving finish with passionate lyrics brought to life by Thomas’ tender vocals, gentle piano and soothing orchestration.
“The Great Unknown” is yet another resounding triumph for Thomas and convincingly proves heĢƵ much more than a one-trick pony.
Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer. He can be reached at crhodes@heraldstandard.com.