If Too Young to Fight It found Dan Keyes burning up the dancefloor, its successor relocates him to the rock club, where emo-pop anthems emanate from the stereo and new wave revivalism reigns supreme. Keyes has explored those genres before, both with Recover's unapologetically emotive work and Young Love's club-ready debut, but One of Us is the first to feature a synthesis of the two. The frontman dives headfirst into the mix, embracing everything from fat, gauzy synthesizers to R&B basslines, robotic samples, handclaps, and assorted '80s-era flourishes. This is party music, and Keyes makes no attempt to inflate it with lyrical prowess or songwriting depth, preferring instead to shine a spotlight on the glossy, spruced-up surface. "I got my black boots on, gonna show up late," he declares in "Black Boots," "but that's ok because we won't leave 'til dawn." It's a simple sentiment that reflects the world One of Us caters to: the world of late-night Manhattan bars and dancefloor affairs, a world in which footwear symbolizes the extent to which one is ready to party. Throughout it all, the emphasis remains on rock, with even the most danceable songs taking root in electric guitars and live percussion. "Black Boots" even shoots for stadium-sized grandeur, its singalong chorus aimed at the cheap seats, before dissolving into an Auto-tuned outro. The songs suffer whenever Keyes dials back the sonic spectacle, with tracks like "Down on Me" owing more to post-grunge balladry than contemporary dance-rock. Despite the album's surface-oriented appeal, however, the bulk of One of Us remains stronger than Young Love's previous release, as it wisely targets the feet instead of the head. ~ Andrew Leahey, All Music Guide
One of Us
04/28/2009 | Fontana Island
All Music Guide Review
One of Us Track Listing
One of Us Notes
Something happened in the intervening years since you last heard Young Love. Sure, Dan Keyes is still masterminding music that sets dancefloors ablaze, but since the release of 2007's excellent Too Young To Fight It, there's been a shift, a subtle but assured transmogrification in Keyes that manifests itself in each carefully chosen chord, each deliberately delivered lyric. "It's different," Keyes says. "It's older. As a songwriter I've matured. I have a more focused, clear idea of what I want to do musically and lyrically." From the sound of One of Us, what Keyes wanted musically and lyrically was a record that is at once energetic and contemplative, moving audiences seamlessly from a dancefloor packed with strangers to a room filled with friends.
Credits of One of Us
- Alex Shenitsky
- A&R
- Tara Bryan
- A&R
- Jazuli Henderson Smart
- Design
- Erik Tonnesen
- Keyboards
- Bob Mann
- Guitar
- Howie Weinberg
- Mastering
- Andrew Clark
- Assistant Engineer
- Doug Joswick
- Package Production
- Joshua Sarubin
- A&R
- Charles Goodan
- Engineer
- Josh Wilbur
- Engineer, Mixing
- John King
- Drums, Keyboards, Producer, Engineer, Mixing
- Kris Yiengst
- Photography, Art Coordinator
- Kenneth Capello
- Photography
- John Adams
- Drum Engineering, Piano Engineer
- Dan Keyes
- Bass, Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
- Jimmy Vela
- Drums
- Paul Resta
- Marketing
- John Spiker
- Assistant Engineer
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