Youth – Vish Iyer

Reviewed by Vish Iyer
Published on Mar 3, 2005

After an extensive hiatus of four years, Collective Soul is back
with all the positive energy it is known for: This has always been
its strength, and thank god it is still hanging on to it.

The group has gone through a few personal as well as
professional changes in the four years of its absence: It have a
new producer — Dexter Green — and a new guitarist, Joel Kosche.
Furthermore,
Youth is the act’s first release on its independent label,
El Music Group. Also, singer Ed Roland got divorced, and drummer
Will Turpin had a child.

So how much have all these changes affected the band on the
creative front? Thankfully, not that much. The men are as energetic
as ever, and importantly, they have limited themselves to their
trademark style of catchy guitar-hooks, irresistibly singable
choruses, and numbers that last for less than three-and-half
minutes.

The lyrics are as uplifting as the music: “Oh I’m newly
calibrated / All shiny and clean…Oh I’m happy as Christmas /
All wrapped to be seen,” sings vocalist Ed Rolland on Collective
Soul’s first new track in four years, “Better Now,” which features
the chorus “Let the word out / I’ve got to get out / Oh I’m feeling
better now.”

On the sprightly “Feels Like (It Feels All Right)”, he declares
“It feels like ready go / I’m full throttle while the fluids flow,”
and asserts “Yeah I’m coming round, this world loves me now / Feel
the rhythm of changes laying down” on the exuberantly optimistic
“General Attitude.”

Youth is as conventional a Collective Soul record as any of
its other ones. If
Hints Allegations…is remembered for the hit
single”Shine,” and
Collective Soul for “Gel,” then
Youth offers “Counting The Days” — a song having the
perfect attributes of a single — as a fitting counterpart.

As a matter of fact,
Youth captures all the other elements of a traditional
Collective Soul record: hard-hitting guitar-power songs (“Better
Now,” with the awesomely funky sax solo), “There’s A Way,” and
“Feels Like”; slower ballad-like numbers (“How Do You Love,” “Under
Heaven’s Skies” and “Satellite”); and sexy dance-grooves (“Home”
and “General Attitude”).

With so many music styles being infused with each other in the
wider music industry, and so many of the other attempts at creating
hybrids falling flat on their faces, Collective Soul’s interesting
pastiche of crispy rock music mixed with fun pop vibes has proven
successful time and again with every album that it has put out. The
band is undoubtedly one of the few genuine pop-rock acts left in
the music industry, which stinks today of so many phony
look-alikes.

Rating: B+

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