Down to NothingUnbreakable (2008)Revelation
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Save It for the Birds is up first, and it's a decent effort if not a bit pedestrian. The recording is a little flat and future releases would prove their promising nature, but this is still 11 slightly above average straight-edge hardcore tracks not unlike their Richmond peers/predecessors Count Me Out.
Revelation smartly offers a 28-second interlude between the albums here, which makes a lot of sense. For other hardcore compilations that include only two or three full-lengths on one disc (and no EPs), this isn't at all a bad idea.
Where the band really start to hit their stride is with Splitting Headache, even though it was actually a collaboration of tracks from a few recording sessions. But between their splits with On Thin Ice and Kids Like Us, a few other songs from previous releases and one new song (one of which is a cover of Murder Weapon's "Unbreakable"), the production is a little better and the band is simply writing better, more original songs. Things are much more dynamic here, with sometimes well-integrated breakdowns and a fair number of riff changeups. As a result, it's also much more compelling; the traits show in eventual fan favorites like "Go Ahead Wit Yo' Fake Ass," "I Can't Believe My Eyes," "Smash It" and "Home Sweet Home." Admittedly, the lyrics bear a much more unintentional goofiness than on Save It for the Birds ("Fuck off, nobody thinks you're cool / you fucking tool"), but it's so much fun the band'll have your local town drunkie floor-punching.
While you'll need the aforementioned Most, 2006's Higher Learning 7" and an upcoming split with 50 Lions to complete the discography, Unbreakable is as comprehensive of a compilation as you can get for a hardcore band that's been around for about eight years (a near-legacy by the genre's standards).