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Jason Tate
11/20/05, 02:50 AM
Cartel - Chroma
September 20th, 2005
The Militia Group (http://www.themilitiagroup.com)

Ever since this debut full-length was first played in my car stereo on the drive home from The Militia Group's home office, I've had one goal in mind: review this before Rohan does.

Okay, I'm only half kidding.

I'm reviewing this CD for one reason: I believe in this band. I think my faith in Cartel is evidenced through my desire, and utmost excitement, to 'leak' the band's album on this very website. I'd never do such a huge promotion with a band I wasn't 100% behind. There's a variety of aspects to the band's music that touches me in ways, up until now, only Michael Jackson was able to do (sick and twisted attempt at humor, I know). I hope to convey these feelings as best I can through the following words; however, there are things that you will only discover through sitting down for a good hour with this album, alone, in your room, and with the volume turned up very loudly. My conviction and sharp pose on this band are apparent from any visitor's every day visit to this website, and this is exactly the review you expected me to write.

Let's be straight up about this before we go any further: this is a pop record. And, I for one, am thankful the band can be forward with their fans about what they play. They don't run from or conceal what they are. They've never masked their sound with words and descriptions coined to hide the fact that they play pop music. I think their open policy is a testament to the band's willingness and desire to change how people look at the pop-punk genre. There's nothing worse than looking at an article on one of the mainstream pop-punk bands where they try to claim to play "rock music" or toil an angle that moves them out from under the "pop-punk mantle." It is this author's attitude that there's nothing wrong with pop music. It's a shame that this genre and term has picked up such a soiled connotation. It's even more refreshing because this band pushes the limits of what the world expects a pop-album to be. Furthermore, while no one will ever call them the next Radiohead, Mars Volta, or Sigur Rios, the band never set out to break the musical mold (we'll come back to this point later).

In a scene that is reaching saturation levels, it's important for bands to make strides to reach the top tier of their genre. In one colorful and bold stroke Cartel have raised the bar for what we should expect from the pop bands that hook their way into our hearts. Cartel's new album was coherently created to be a work of art as heard as a whole and not just individual parts. I believe that listening to this album is like witnessing a master craftsman at the pinnacle of his game.

Seeing as we are currently streaming the album on this very website, I'm going to let the songs speak for themselves. You don't need a play by play of what you can readily listen to with a few clicks of your mouse. Instead, I want to highlight a few of my favorite tracks and explain my reasoning for holding this album on so high of a pedestal.

Say Anything (Else), the album's opener, sets the tempo for the album. With the first words being sung (literally) through a telephone, it perfectly alerts the listener to what they should expect from the subsequent 12 songs. It sets forth a standard, pace, and theme for how the record (and I do mean, record) will play out.

Matter of Time, the album's fourth track, punches it's way through the speakers. The bass and drums pounding out a sonic beat. With Will's vocals being masterfully pulled in and out of the mix, it's the small intricacies of the song that make it stand out. For example, when the music fades and we hear, "because all things considered, it's a game and you're not the winner.." I can't help but smile. It's these small details that put the song together in such a beautiful manner.

Burn this City, and Save Us are both stand our lyrical tracks. And while some will be disappointed by the re-inclusion of "Luckie St." I think the new version is a great addition to put the album into over-drive as it heads into its second-half.

Not a single review of this album will go by without mentioning Track 10, The Minstrel's Prayer. This song is what, in this writer's opinion, single handedly puts the band on a whole new innovative echelon. 68 drum and 80 string tracks come roaring into the airwaves. A single guitar begins to play. Then Will's angelic vocals begin. The song's theme is a message to the listener about how the band understands their purpose has always been to write "silly (pop) songs" about girls, and love. For years, song-writers (or minstrels as Will croons) have been writing songs to win the heart of females. The song, as I take it, is the band saying that they are only one in a long line of bands that have written this variety of music, and that they only hope to keep this torch burning bright. This song pays homage to those "minstrels through the ages", and to the melody and love that can be found within music's mending words.

Q & A. Essentially the final two tracks on the album are two parts to the same song. One, well, the question, and the other, the answer. What we find in the album's closer is the band's allusion to some of the great song writers of past. Whether that be Brian Wilson's (and many jazz and blue's musicians) concept of weaving the refrains from previous songs back into the final track, or the electronic experimentation you see in the final minutes; it stands out to achieve it's intended dramatic purpose. I've never been more inclined to want to start an entire record over again as I have after listening to this CD.

The bar has been set. Scratch that. The bar has been raised. As the kid who has been known for his love of pop-punk: this is an opus.

There are those with more diverse musical taste than me that will probably hate this CD. There are others who will call it run-of-the-mill-pop. My "e-zine credibility" will probably take more shots for my words in this review than your girlfriend on a Friday night. I fully expect to be called out, made fun of, and to see the above words used as just another reason why I'm a ruining the scene and should be silenced. But, with this realization I still put forth the above declaration in writing. I've never been one to listen to the coolest music. I only listen to the music I like.

Take my words for what they are: a small 10 minute trip inside my mind. I hope some of you reading can appreciate a good pop-album. I know there are other genres out there, I listen to them. I know there is deeper music out there, I listen to a lot of it. I understand where the critics are coming from; however, no one can change how these songs resonate inside of me. If you think I'm out of sorts for saying these things, I feel sorry for you for never having felt the way I do while listening to my favorite Cd's. I'm a firm believer that the more selective and pretentious one's listening tastes become, the more you find yourself unable to allow music to be fun. Pop music should make you forget your worries, allow you to nod your head to the melody, and smile at the "stupid songs." Let me be candid: these are the bands, and tunes, that will become etched in your mind with memories for years to come. Cheer up, music shouldn't be a sedative - it should be an experience.

Tracklisting
1) Say Anything (Else)
2) Honestly
3) Runaway
4) Matter of Time
5) Burn this City
6) Save us
7) Luckie St.
8) Settle Down
9) If I Fail
10) The Minstrel's Prayer
11) Q
12) A

Band Website: www.cartelrocks.com (http://www.cartelrocks.com)
Band MP3s: www.purevolume.com/cartel (http://www.purevolume.com/cartel)

hello houston
12/09/05, 03:36 PM
just a really good band, i saw them on the take cover tour...it seems all those bands were great

TBSowns524
12/10/05, 03:57 PM
good review mr. tate. this is a fun pop-punk record.

AaronDemus
12/12/05, 02:15 AM
Great revue. Great band.
I had the opportunity to tour with them, great band live as well.
Jason, you and I both share in a love for this band.
And definitely no guilty-pleasure, I'm just plain in love.

cahrishurr
12/12/05, 10:28 AM
album of the year

Ryan Imhof
01/23/06, 09:16 PM
My album of the year last year. Amazing. hasnt left my cd player since september.

zizou1790
02/06/06, 02:09 PM
i really dislike this band.

tommyhaych
02/14/06, 01:20 PM
This album only has a couple of good songs on (Say anything (else), honestly and luckie street), but I feel the rest is just noise. The Minstrels Prayer, Q & A have to be the most irritating songs I've heard in a while, it's just random noise repeating itself.

I'm not gonna listen to this album again.

racethesun
03/16/06, 05:47 AM
yah, great solid record. saw them live on screaming for babies, and were amazing

redwing_uk
03/21/06, 03:20 AM
Good review, and props for standing by your opinions (like the band stick by their music in the face of the "pop punk" hating). Brilliant record too, can't wait for them to come to the UK

Icarealot
05/10/06, 02:23 PM
This album is unbelievable. I have been spinning the bastard for months and it does not get old. Will's voice is absolutely righteous. This is smart pop and I am not afraid to say I love it. 'A' is an amazing adventure that beautifully ties the album up. I can not wait for new music from this band. Unbelievable.

fresh2death
06/25/06, 04:44 PM
first of all, and just so everyone knows, I'M A BLACK, HIP-HOP LOVER. I haven't legally paid for a punk album in years, 'cause it's all been crap. of course, that's until this year, where nice-ass new bands like THE FUCKIN' AMAZING ARCTIC MONKEYS (no, that's not all their name) and CARTEL have made albums actually worth paying for. The entire CHROMA is actually worth the money, and I recommend everyone cop the shit asap.

TheCaptain
08/10/06, 05:14 PM
This album is amazing. It hasn't left my cd player in a month. I think I've listened to it 3 times back to back w/o it getting old whatsoever. I love it.

Gilsteryo!
08/31/06, 01:59 PM
first of all, and just so everyone knows, I'M A BLACK, HIP-HOP LOVER. I haven't legally paid for a punk album in years, 'cause it's all been crap. of course, that's until this year, where nice-ass new bands like THE FUCKIN' AMAZING ARCTIC MONKEYS (no, that's not all their name) and CARTEL have made albums actually worth paying for. The entire CHROMA is actually worth the money, and I recommend everyone cop the shit asap.


I agree.

mrs. will pugh
12/29/06, 12:13 AM
i liked cartel from the minute i heard "Honestly"
and then i saw them at warped tour.
they were playing at the same time as another band i really wanted to see, so i was only going to stay for one song.
yeaaaaaaah right.
i fell in love with them.
and will's hot...lol
the cd is amazing. and i agree with you about how they don't try to cover up the fact that their on the poppy side. its still good music!
i'm seeing them at the house of blues in feb. i couldn't be more excited.
thank you for acknowledging their talent, and not blowing them off because their pop.

Aikichi
01/12/07, 02:55 AM
One of the best reviews i've ever read^^
Totally agree and probably one of the best pop records in last few years.
Great job Cartel^^

spartanfan10
02/12/07, 10:49 AM
Really suprised me, incredible record. Didn't leave my player for about a month straight.

ThisIsNotDan
04/02/07, 07:15 PM
overrated

CP_Ree
04/18/07, 07:04 PM
I just came across this review and all I could think while reading was... this guy thinks exactly as I do word for word. Great review, great cd.

ben !
06/24/07, 12:54 AM
Simple words we never knew,
The power behind what they put us through,
Now it's all begun what it takes to make it real.
We're standing on the edge of this,
When our soul is gone what will we miss?
We lost what it takes to really, make it feel.

But the better day's behind us now,
We all need someone to tell us how
To save the state of where we are,
It keeps demanding more and more and more.

And who will save us?
This can't go on, without the meaning in the rhyming.
Can you save? Can you save us?
Well I can't go on, out of rhythm with our time.

We hold these truths self evident,
The lies we used to represent
Who we are because it was never meant to be.
And all the songs we used to sing, they used to tell us everything.
All about how it was never meant to be.

But the better day's behind us now.
We all need someone to tell us how
To save the state of where we are,
It keeps demanding more and more and more.

And who will save us?
Well this can't go on, without the meaning in the rhyming.
Can you save? Can you save us?
Well I can't go on, out of rhythm with our time.

Say the words, give it all the time you need.
Let it out, oh just say anything.
Say the words and make them count,
Say them loud without a doubt.
Give us truth and nothing more,
Leave us wanting more and more.

And who will save us?
This can't go on. Without the meaning in the rhyming.
Can you say, that you'll save us?
Well I can't go on, We're out of rhythm with our time.
Can you say, that you'll save us?
Well I can't go on. We're out of rhythm with our time.
We're out of rhythm with our time... yell with me and f the critics

ben !
06/24/07, 01:01 AM
rock with mel!!!!!

Stay up all night and sleep all day,
We were smart kids with too much to say,
and so, so sure that they were missing out.
They're the ones who are missing out
We were elemental. Talked down to bare essentials.
Who knew we'd get so far?

Cause our days were numbered by nights on too many rooftops.
They said we'd burn so bright.
We burn this city and go.

Play it again, (our games of love and lust.)
There's no such thing (no there's never too much).
And we were so, so sure, oh we never had a doubt.
Now were counting days to getting out.

We were elemental, took down to bare essentials.
Who knew we'd get so far?

Cause our days were numbered by nights on too many rooftops.
They said we're wasting our lives,
Oh at least we know, that if we die - we lived with passion.
They said we'd burn so bright.
We burn this city and go.

Pack our bags and get away - they're catching on to us.
So pack our bags and get away - they're catching on to us.
Pack our bags and get away - they're catching on to us.
Pack our bags and get away - they're catching on to us.

Cause our days were numbered by nights on too many rooftops.
They said we're wasting our lives,
Oh at least we know, that if we die - we lived with passion.
They said we'd burn so bright.
We burn this city, and go.

cuff98
08/24/07, 09:53 AM
when can we expect the review for cartel's selftitled

combatbaby
08/25/07, 11:12 PM
Just came back and read this for the first time in a whiiiiile. Let me just say that I agree with you 110% on the last paragraph, I don't think I could have found any way to say that better than you did.

TylerTimeBomb
12/03/07, 04:20 PM
i really dislike this band.

its because none of them are named shaggy or violent J.

Crank
12/20/07, 01:34 PM
I liked the album in general... If I Fail was a personal favorite for me... And I liked their cover of wonderwall, actually... I think the band just has that cookie cutter sound that a lot of other bands have.

cereal4life
02/09/08, 05:40 AM
Yo Jason, "Sigur Ros" is spelt wrong brother! I've been meaning to check this album out for a while now. Apparently the newest album is a complete and utter crapper! Bit of a disappointment when bands do that.

ThisIsNotDan
06/26/08, 10:57 AM
I was wrong. this is such a good pop-punk album

albatrossflyer
08/07/08, 01:34 PM
Can I go against the grain a little here and say that I really don't like this band at all? It's not because they're bad or anything, but they're just sooo average. I listen to a lot of music on Pandora radio, and Cartel keeps coming up on my Jimmy Eat World, Anberlin, and Blink 182 stations. I've tried liking them, I really have. But honestly, (no pun intended), they are really mediocre and giving their record a 90's rating is ridiculous.

MusicTalks
10/10/08, 07:43 AM
Can I go against the grain a little here and say that I really don't like this band at all? It's not because they're bad or anything, but they're just sooo average. I listen to a lot of music on Pandora radio, and Cartel keeps coming up on my Jimmy Eat World, Anberlin, and Blink 182 stations. I've tried liking them, I really have. But honestly, (no pun intended), they are really mediocre and giving their record a 90's rating is ridiculous.

finally, someone can have a difference of opinion without being degrading and childish. the fact is that you simply do not like the band and while others share your view, they love to trash bands they don't like. i applaud you for being civilized.

with that said, i agree 100% with this review of the album. will has an amazing voice, live and on record, with full instruments and acoustic. jeff lett is a great bass player, kevin sanders is a damn good drummer and joseph pepper, well he's just a maniac on the guitar - totally phenom.

ExplodingStereo
12/30/08, 07:13 AM
finally, someone can have a difference of opinion without being degrading and childish. the fact is that you simply do not like the band and while others share your view, they love to trash bands they don't like. i applaud you for being civilized.

with that said, i agree 100% with this review of the album. will has an amazing voice, live and on record, with full instruments and acoustic. jeff lett is a great bass player, kevin sanders is a damn good drummer and joseph pepper, well he's just a maniac on the guitar - totally phenom.
I'm kind of mixed between your opinion and albatrossflyer's. Will Pugh has an amazing voice, and the band can play; the problem is that they play very generic pop-rock. I can handle some bands when it comes to the giant wave of sound-alike pop-punk/pop-rock/whatever they're called these days bands coming in the wake of the "great" Fall Out Boy, but I've noticed over the last couple years that I'm becoming more judgmental of these bands because they're becoming less original. Overall, Cartel is somewhat original, enough to make me like them, but I think they need to prove they're more than "the band that made 'Honestly'" and stand out more.

MusicTalks
12/30/08, 09:51 AM
I'm kind of mixed between your opinion and albatrossflyer's. Will Pugh has an amazing voice, and the band can play; the problem is that they play very generic pop-rock. I can handle some bands when it comes to the giant wave of sound-alike pop-punk/pop-rock/whatever they're called these days bands coming in the wake of the "great" Fall Out Boy, but I've noticed over the last couple years that I'm becoming more judgmental of these bands because they're becoming less original. Overall, Cartel is somewhat original, enough to make me like them, but I think they need to prove they're more than "the band that made 'Honestly'" and stand out more.

I totally agree that there are a million half-ass bands out there that have completely saturated this musical genre. When Cartel first put out their demos and even Chroma, they were even more unique. Honestly - and this could be because Cartel is one of my favorite bands - but I don't think that Cartel sounds like any other band out. If anything, those bands try to sound like Cartel. I personally like their 2nd full length better, and I'm certainly in the minority with that assessment. I'm hoping that their new album in 09 will be an epic 3rd release for them. I've heard them demo a few songs and so far, I'm eagerly anticipating it. With that said, I hope that it's something new and fun, but definitely something pop/punk. Venturing away from that, in order to distance themselves, would be a bad move, IMO.

OneloveCartel
10/22/09, 03:08 PM
reading the review for cycles made me want to look up the past reviews on the old cartel albums that i havent read in a long time. and i cant even tell you how great this review is. i mean if i could explain it i would, but unfortunately not all of us have a way with worlds like you do. thank you for giving cartel the chance at success so early in the game, seriously you're one of the people who's made them become the band they are today, and for that i thank you greatly.

keep up the awesome job on this website, it's been keeping me entertained for a while now. (:

Jay Evan
02/26/11, 04:10 PM
Will may have some of the best vocals in the pop-punk genre

gjpinizz
04/05/11, 02:15 AM
this album is perfect

Searos
04/11/11, 07:50 AM
bump. I recently purchased this album at a concert. I had heard a few songs by them. Listened to the rest of Cartel's work. I really can't wait to hear more from them. They are not only amazing live but do the pop parts just right and the rock parts just right. Chroma is my favorite <3