The Devil Wears Prada – With Roots Above and Branches Below

The seasoning should never be what the entrée was remembered for.

The Devil Wears Prada
With Roots Above and Branches Below
On past records, The Devil Wears Prada seemed to shine when they let their softer side showcase: Plagues was better when the band let the keys breathe, when the quieter counterpart to the aggressive sound was featured and could open up songs. Not a lot has changed with that opinion on The Devil Wears Prada’s third full-length release, With Roots Above and Branches Below. The over-arching problem is that With Roots Above isn’t breaking a ton of new ground.

When I first started listening, I loved the fact that the Dayton, OH band brought it from the start. “Sassafras” starts with four drum clicks and then BOOM – the shotgun blasts start happening. But as I kept listening, it felt more like the songs were running together. I was listening, but most of the tracks were turning up forgettable; they weren’t making me stop and go remember the name of the song or the track number.

All this up until the track “Louder Than Thunder” shook me from my daze. (By the way, that’s track 10 of 11.) It feels like it could have been added in as a transition track (the last line of the song “What would it take for things to be quiet?” is directly followed by the intense screams and guitars of “Lord Xenu”), but it’s a very beautiful, lamenting piece. On With Roots Above, I would have liked to have seen the band take this ambient approach. It would have been cool to see TDWP drop one or two more of these ambient pieces into place, completing a package. The band shows these glimpses – they could have easily used their keys with their current songwriting to create a beautiful, aggressive, brooding, metal record. Instead, I felt like I listened to a number of forgettable tracks. The seasoning should never be what the entrée was remembered for. For fans of Underoath’s They’re Only Chasing Safety. [Ferret] David Stagg

DVP rating: 4.0
Writer rating: 3.0

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7 Comments

  1. John D. had this to say on August 8, 2009 | Permalink

    I agree that the singer and synths should be showcased more. They certainly seem like they have the talent for it.

  2. Jacob had this to say on August 20, 2009 | Permalink

    I would definitely like them more if it were so, but they’ve never been that kind of band. They’re like that because they’re from Dayton and not more south or west. Everything there is heavy and monotonous. I just can’t take all of this Prada Metal.

  3. Smart Emo had this to say on September 11, 2009 | Permalink

    It’s Prada! everything’s good.

  4. Andy had this to say on September 22, 2009 | Permalink

    I agree, I suppose, but I still love this album. I think after a few listens, you start to notice the differences between songs more.

  5. Evan Sch had this to say on September 28, 2009 | Permalink

    I have NEVER been disappointed with TDWP!! I do love when they get the synth and clean vocals out there but I think, for the most part, they do a good job scattering those things through their songs.

  6. ben had this to say on November 20, 2009 | Permalink

    Download

    The Devil Wears Prada – With Roots Above And Branches Below (2009)

    Here

    http://wanukore.com/devil-wears-prada-with-roots-above-and-branches-below-2009-download-descargar/

  7. Sean Flynn had this to say on April 8, 2010 | Permalink

    The Devil wears Prada were never truly amazing, at all. Jeremys vocals had to be edited, because ive seen thm live, many times, and the whole band was actaully a dissapointment to the album. Jeremys vocals are nowhere as good as they are on the album, and the instruments are sketchy at best

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