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Music review: 3 Doors Down – ‘Us and the Night’

By Clint Rhodes crhodes@heraldstandard.Com 3 min read
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The latest effort from 3 Doors Down is a spirited call to the broken that better days are ahead.

“This is the call to the broken/Stand up and take back your world today,” declares lead singer Brad Arnold on the stirring album opener.

“Us and the Night” is typical 3 Doors Down material, complete with infectious hooks, grinding guitar riffs and pounding drums all fronted by ArnoldĢƵ passionate vocals.

“Everybody has the right to change/I didn’t say I would,” sings Arnold on the rousing “Believe It.” The band has always delivered likable mainstream rock anthems that fall between the pop-rock sound of Matchbox Twenty and the harder rock edge of Fuel.

While the new album offers more of the same successful formula that sparked a respectable 16-year career, the band component is reinforced with the addition of two new band members. Guitarist Chet Roberts and bassist Justin Biltonen join guitarist Chris Henderson, drummer Greg Upchurch and Arnold, to provide additional muscle to the 11 new tracks.

Heavy doses of fiery guitar work power “In the Dark,” a sensual number about an alluring temptress who finds pleasure in being mysterious and unpredictable when the lights go down, and the survival anthem “Still Alive.”

Other rockers like “Living in Your Hell,” “Love Is a Lie” and the title track were made loud to be played loud. Not all of the new material is an adrenaline-packed punch to the gut. The Mississippi band demonstrates a proficient knack for constructing a well-crafted ballad when necessary.

The piano opening and mild orchestration found on “Inside of Me” and the acoustic touch of “Pieces of Me” tenderly showcase a yearning to break free from the things that hold us back and limit true personal happiness. For me, the bandĢƵ finest moment comes on the album closer.

“Fell From the Moon” is another piano-led number that speaks of regret and redemption as Arnold sings, “I don’t know how to get back/Or how to make up for all that I lack/But I’m gonna get there and I’m not gonna be scared/I got so much to prove.”

Through an engaging combination of rousing rockers and heartfelt ballads, the messages contained on “Us and the Night” speak to anyone who has found a renewed strength from adversity.

Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer.

He can be reached at crhodes@heraldstandard .com.

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