The Dream Open Hand

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/14/2003
  • Sales Rank: 97,155
  • Label: TRUSTKILL RECORDS
  • UPC: 824953004126
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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The Dream

1LISTENIn Your Eyes 2:35
2LISTENLife as Is 4:16
3LISTENThe Dream 4:39
4LISTEN11th Street 4:38
5LISTENThis Is the End 3:36
6LISTENThe Struggle 4:15
7LISTENThought Process 2:47
8LISTENRadio Days 4:27
9LISTENForever 3:14
10LISTENNever Alone 8:07
11LISTEN626 4:21

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

When a rocker who is known for his association with one band forms a new band, some people inevitably assume that the new band will be similar. But that isn't necessarily the case. Take Open Hand founder Justin Isham, for example. The singer/guitarist is known for his association with the Los Angeles-based hardcore band I Awake, but Open Hand isn't hardcore. Even if one has a very liberal and far-reaching definition of that term, The Dream cannot honestly be described as a hardcore release. Rather, Open Hand favors alternative pop/rock with a post-grunge orientation; the L.A. combo draws on Live and Bush as well as the seminal Nirvana. Isham has cited Peter Gabriel as a major influence, and why not? There is no reason why Gabriel's writing couldn't have some type of impact on a group of modern alterna-rockers -- it isn't as though every artist who came along in the '90s or 2000s is totally oblivious to older artists who were active in the '60s, '70s, or '80s. The Dream, Open Hand's first full-length album, offers a healthy balance of melody and aggression. The material is loud and forceful, but it's also intricate and highly melodic; the band's melodies can be hauntingly pretty, and those melodies usually work well with the CD's introspective lyrics. Ultimately, Open Hand has as much to do with craftsmanship as it does with volume, which is why tunes like "11th Street" and "Forever" wouldn't become unappealing if the band had to perform them in an acoustic setting. The Dream isn't groundbreaking, but overall, Isham and his fellow L.A. residents make a decent contribution to the post-grunge field. Alex Henderson, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Dreamby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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July 18, 2004: By now you(the reader) are probablly scratching your head. As to why I headlined this review such the way you see above. The reason being; most bands today tend to fit a cliche or just make a song for the money.this is where Open Hand meanders from the murder. They in a sense let the vocals take the backseat and let there music drive the car of there success. This in my opinion is refreshing and a lost cause in the music industry today