Sea of Tranquility
Review
Legacy: Legacy
Legacy, while not quite living up to its lofty name, nevertheless deftly
stirs the melodic bombast of Eighties pop metal, the churning darkness
of Nineties alternative metal and the heavy drama of modern-day
progressive metal into a tasty concoction.
Judging on appearances alone – the cheesy album cover, the pretty-boy
photos of band members and the song titles ("Troubleshooter," "Mission
of Mercy," "Can’t Remember Love") – it would be easy to dismiss Legacy
as a wannabe hair-band. But the Los Angeles-based quartet actually has a
lot more going for it than a retro vibe. All of these guys are seasoned
players who know their way around impressive hooks, kick-ass riffs and –
plain and simple – decent songwriting. While this self-titled debut
opens with three songs featuring one-word-titles, downtuned guitars and
some major angst, the next song, "Autumn Rising," sends listeners back
to those carefree windows-down days of the late-Eighties. This power
ballad would have been huge 15 years ago.
The rest of Legacy falls into a similar pattern, although three
instrumentals ("2.4.1," "Astral Sundown" and the Jason Becker/Marty
Friedman-inspired "Thank You") during the album’s second half slow down
the record’s pacing. Still, these guys manage to bridge the gap between
three genres that don’t seem as far removed from each other as they once
did.
Added: March 26th 2003
Reviewer: Michael Popke
Score: 3 1/2 stars
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