12.07.2007

Sometimes Pop Punk Gets the Best of Me....



As summer ends throughout most of the country, it’s nice to have a record and a band that reminds us of all the great things summers mean – fires on the beach or afternoons on the lake, young love and summer crushes, and anthems that stay with you from May to August, fueling your late night sing-a-longs. The Dangerous Summer not only references the third season by name, but recalls its adventures in lyrics of hope, new beginnings, and those all-too-tough endings.

“Oh God it’s almost summer,” vocalist AJ Perdomo announces on the opening “I Would Stay.” Listening to this record you can’t help but think of high school seniors packing up and leaving town for their first semester of college and the adventures contained therein. No surprise that the four members of this group are of that age group, 17 and 18 year olds who know nothing but hope, whose adventures, stories and tragedies are yet to be written.

“The Permanent Rain” is the anthem for every kid who has ever dreamed of a life on the road, living in a van with your best friends, making music and living in exile, a song for every guitar hero and hopeless romantic to sing along to. Perdomo’s vocals are impassioned and meaningful as he confesses, “I want to make you proud, but I really don’t know how.”

The dual vocals that close “Here We Are After Dark” recall the best moments of Jimmy Eat World – a band that always seemed more mature than their peers, as is the case with this fresh faced foursome. “Home” tells the story of a lover leaving for the west coast, every east coast boy’s nightmare. “Disconnect” is that east coast boy driving “a thousand miles out west” in search of love.

“Of Confidence” closes the record. Perdomo sings, “You're making this a story you hope will never end,” as he relays the tragedy of crushes who become lovers and the awkwardness that ensues. Fading out with the requisite gang vocals, The Dangerous Summer pull out every trick needed to make a classic pop record.

For a Maryland band, The Dangerous Summer certainly knows the sound of California sunshine. Sugary pop in all the best ways, If You Could Only Keep Me Alive breathes life into a stagnant scene. Shocking these youngsters are just that, as they approach the craft of songwriting with a maturity lost on many of their peers. More Third Eyed Blind than Cartel, more Phil Collins than Gerard Way, The Dangerous Summer hit a home run with If You Could Only Keep Me Alive, their Hopeless Records debut.

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