Appropriately self-titled, the fourth studio release from Mississippi rockers 3 Doors Down is everything an eponymous album should be, delivering few surprises amidst a steady stream of fan-friendly fare. Traveling safely down a manicured road to middle America, the 12 songs speak with an unwavering voice that flirts with optimism while dancing with patriotism and enduring reality. The timely anthem "Citizen/Soldier" is upbeat and amplified, while the ballad "Let Me Be Myself" tears a page from Relationships 101, a lyrical textbook that sees plenty of wear throughout the album. Add a violin to frontman Brad Arnold's warm twang, and "It's The Only One You've Got" and "She Don't Want The World" could be cowboy hat-wearing country hits, but without the violin they play like cogs in the same contemporary hit machine that fuels the mid-tempo radio relevance of Bon Jovi, Nickelback and Chris Daughtry.
The bulk of the album remains true to the band's southern, guitar-driven roots, but the album's standout is "Your Arms Feel Like Home," a can't-miss, feel-good ballad that should be the band's biggest hit to date and promises to fill more dance floors than "The Electric Slide" as this summer's wedding season approaches. There's something to be said for being consistent, and 3 Doors Down have made it an art form.
Paul Gargano
06.11.08
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Review
All Music Guide Review
Like many heavy guitar bands who surfaced at the tail-end of the '90s, 3 Doors Down have reverted to comfortable old habits in their advanced years, shedding some of the post-grunge trappings of their hit album in favor of a slightly more conventional sound, one where classic rock mixes it up with '80s metal. Not that the boys have gotten fun on their eponymous 2008 album. Some of the cavernous murk has lifted, some of the sonics have straightened out, replaced by something that's heavier yet still leaden -- as typified by the opening "Train," which lurches with the intention of turning into a Southern-fried Skynyrd rocker but never quite does -- but the group is inherently indisposed to having a laugh. Naturally, a group this earnest does sing about matters of life and death, as on "Citizen/Soldier," a salute to America's National Guardsmen, that wound up being used in a National Guard recruitment ad in the year prior to the release of 3 Doors Down, but there's heartfelt searching, like when singer Brad Arnold complains that "It's Not My Time," or the many times he decides he just has to be himself, thereby exhorting his fans to do the same. All this moodiness is set to guitars that surge, not really riding any riffs but rather pushing his pleas forward on Walls of Sound so compressed and cleansed they wind up sounding like mush. And that's the ultimate irony of 3 Doors Down as they mature: try as they may to pour out their angst-ridden hearts, by riding out their success and smoothing out their music they've turned into mildly aggro background music at malls and movie theaters across the nation. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Track Listing
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Credits
- Doug Sonders
- Photography, Cover Photo
- George Marino
- Mastering
- Andy Wallace
- Mixing
- Kris Wilkinson
- Strings, String Arrangements
- Chapman Baehler
- Photography
- Sandy Brummels
- Creative Director
- Greg Upchurch
- Group Member
- John O'Mahoney
- Mixing Assistant
- Matt Roberts
- Group Member
- Johnny K
- Producer, Engineer
- Kirk Kelsey
- Producer, Engineer, Digital Editing
- Todd Harrell
- Group Member
- Chris Henderson
- Group Member
- Brad Arnold
- Group Member
- Tom MacKay
- A&R
- Mike Paragone
- Engineer
- Christopher Kornmann
- Art Direction, Design
- Heather Sturm
- Engineer
- David Angell
- Strings
- Steve Beers
- Assistant Engineer
- John Catchings
- Strings
- David Davidson
- Strings
















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