
Artist Underoath
Album Define the Great Line [CD/DVD]
Rating ★★★☆
Release Date Jun 20, 2006
Label Tooth & Nail
Styles Post-Hardcore, Screamo, Christian Metal
Tracks
1 In Regards to Myslef
2 A Moment Suspended in Time
3 There Could Be Nothing After This
4 You're Ever So Inviting
5 Salmarnir
6 Returning Empty Handed
7 Casting Such a Thin Shadow
8 Moving for the Sake of Motion
9 Writing on the Walls
10 Everyone Looks So Good from Here
11 To Whom It May Concern
12 Bonus Material
Review
Screamo/metalcore Warped Tour mainstays Underoath expand their sonic palettes on the blistering and occasionally majestic Define the Great Line, a mammoth production that exemplifies how far Christian metal has come since the days of Stryper and Bloodgood. On their third full-length release, the Florida-based rockers have found the delicate middle ground between throat-shredding grindcore and My Chemical Romance/From Autumn to Ashes-style emo-punk, utilizing the highly flexible voice of Spencer Chamberlain as a compass for both melody and cacophony. Define the Great Line is bookended by its best cuts, the rousing "In Regards to Myself" and the epic closer, "To Whom it May Concern." Both exemplify the group's newfound confidence in the studio and introduce a real progressive bent to both the production and the overall arrangements. While Underoath explore their faith with both reverence (the monastic "Salmarnir") and suspicion ("There Could Be Nothing After This"), something that sets them apart from the polarizing righteousness of many CCM acts, their crossover potential remains huge, as the prevailing themes of isolation, anger, introspection, and the quest for self-confidence are universal.
AMG