Poppy's new album raises a few questions, as I am not willing to believe this was made in a creative vacuum, causing me to start clicking around to investigate. First off, if it is obvious she has been doing the festival circuit, she is aware of what music works to move large crowds. Jordan Fish from Bring Me the Horizon, who worked on her last album with her, worked on this one as well, which makes sense as there is a similar feel,l though more pop elements and modern rock elements run through a filter of what Spiritbox did on their last album, so rather than Courtney being mistaken for Poppy the tables have been turned. She collaborated with Courtney and Amy Lee on a single that was pretty boring last year, but she got to see how Courtney works, and she seeks to follow that path on."Bruised Sky," which was the first song released from this album.
There is more groove to "Guardian," but it invokes the same kind of anthemic choruses that even Spiritbox feels like they borrowed from nu-metal. Everything still works up to this point, though I doubt this formula will keep its gas for the duration of the album. "Unravel" is more electronically driven, with lighter pop vocals floating over it, though it works well for what it is. This is less of a metal album than the last Spiritrbox. The dudes in House of Protection also lend their instruments to the cause on this album. The guitarist from Knocked Loose helped write "Dying to Forget," which is the heaviest song so far, though that is not the highest bar. She screams and sings on this one, the sung vocals factoring in more heavily on this album.
"Time Will Tell' pretty much follows the blueprint of commercial rock music in 2026. I feel like experimenting more would play in her favor rather than just sounding like everyone else. "Eat the Hate" goes in more of a 90s direction. I respect this more than sounding like today's take on commercial rock music. "The Wait' is more of a ballad. I like where "If I am the Light" is going; I hope it maintains its trajectory. Despite defaulting to the big anthemic chorus and metalcore breakdown, the shift in the verses is enough to work. 'Ribs" follows a similar dynamic with its choruses. The title track closes the album and finds her throwing herself into a more cathartic metalcore chaos. I will give this album a 9, it works for what she does , but it feels like there is not enough of her personality here and too much pandering to the bigger crowds.Yet there is enough of what even long time fans want to make it worthwhile.



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