Over the last few years, one of the trends I've enjoyed is the revival 
of classic rock, if not in spirit, than at least in sound. I've long 
been a proponent of the organic sound that vintage rock carried, but I 
have to admit to being utterly disappointed with
 how bands have squandered such an easy target. There have only been a 
small handful of bands that did it the right way, and even they have 
faltered. Blues Pills made a record that I didn't like in the slightest 
earlier this year, and Graveyard, the shining
 light of this entire genre, just announced their end. So, hearing about
 another band that is trying to revive the spirit of classic rock is 
welcoming, but carries with them the expectations of a string of 
failures.
Let's get the first thing out of the way, when I say classic rock, in 
this case I mean the ethos, not the sound. This is an album with a fully
 modern sheen to the production, with big, punchy guitars that come 
through with power. This is not an album trying
 to sound like the old days.
But like most bands, there's a struggle to find the right approach to 
the music. "Amnesia" is a beautiful song, with a nice bluesy riff and a 
melody that is warm and inviting. There's some Stone Temple Pilots to 
the sound, but there's also something timeless
 about it. It would fit in on classic rock stations as well as 90s rock 
radio. It's great, but it comes after "Push", which opens the album with
 an irritating presence that is a very poor way to welcome me to the 
experience. "The Otherside" is even better,
 hitting all the right marks. It's exactly the type of rock music I 
love, and that should play well with a wider audience. It's got swagger 
and heart, but warmth and melody as well. It's something that would 
sound good in a smoky bar, but also would invite
 the fans to sing along in an arena.
An interesting question comes to mind here: if you're a band in your 
20s, is 'classic rock' to you the bands that came about in the 90s? 
That's the interpretation I get from listening to this record, and it's 
one that I don't mind at all. That was an underrated
 time for mainstream rock music. The bands from then might not have had 
the lasting fame that the 70s bands did, but they created a time when 
rock music could flourish, and perhaps only now are we seeing the 
generation that grew up worshiping them. The last
 ten years could have been the product of people growing up in the 
wasteland of the 80s, and we're due for a rock revival.
That's my hope, and Red Sun Rising gives me hope. Once we get through 
that opening track, the remainder of the album is fantastic rock that 
takes me back to my younger days. They've found a sound that flat-out 
works, and hearing these songs one after the next
 is incredibly impressive for a young band. By the time the minor-key 
chorus of "Unnatural" hits, I'm almost left wondering why I haven't been
 hearing more hype for this band and album.
I'm not going to say this record is perfect, because there are two 
tracks here that don't seem to fit in with the rest of the record 
("Push" and "Awake"), but the majority of the album is excellent. I 
complain a lot about the state of modern rock, but if more
 of it sounded like Red Sun Rising, I wouldn't have much to complain 
about.
 

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