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Music review: Tom Chaplin – ‘The Wave’

By Clint Rhodes for The 2 min read
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For his first solo effort, Tom Chaplin uses his time away from the British band Keane to chronicle his personal journey through addiction and sobriety.

“The Wave” serves as an intimate and emotional confessional describing a descent into darkness and then a rebirth fueled by optimism and hope.

ChaplinĢƵ haunting musical scenarios of pain, loss, struggle and redemption strike me with the same sincerity and heartbreaking intensity I felt on Butch WalkerĢƵ fragile and moody “Afraid of Ghosts” from 2015.

“Buried in the rubble/ThereĢƵ a boy in trouble/Reaching for a piece of the sky,” sings Chaplin on the opening track. “Still Waiting” describes the feeling of having darkness and despair as a constant companion and the frustration of waiting to be rescued from the emotional and physical wreckage that our inner demons orchestrate.

“Hardened Heart” follows the same desperate plea as Chaplin hits his lowest point and scans the damage done to friends and loved ones as he sings, “Hurting everyone I know/Bringing everybody down so low/Stuck along a road of sadness/With nowhere to go.”

Not everything on “The Wave” is doom and gloom. “The River” finds Chaplin finally moving on from the past and turning a new page as he is reminded that the good old days are long gone and it is finally time to move forward.

“Bring the Rain” is a moving track about emerging hope and rejuvenation through the washing away of past sins and the revealing of the light through the cleansing of the soul.

After going through the process of repairing relationships left broken as a result of his addictions, Chaplin pens two very powerful love letters with “Hold On to Our Love” and “Solid Gold.” These tracks outline the process of rediscovering the true power of love through honesty, devotion, understanding and standing by your partnerĢƵ side no matter what the world throws at you.

“Time will sweep these things away/And I’ll be carried by the wave,” declares Chaplin on the title track that gracefully draws the album to a close with Chaplin coming to terms with his existence and feeling at peace with who he is and where he is headed.

Now on his own, Chaplin embraces his recent tribulations and triumphs and delivers the first masterpiece of the new year.

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