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Out of Ashes

Out of Ashes
Dead by Sunrise

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Product Description

Out Of Ashes is the first album from Chester Bennington's new project Dead By Sunrise. Feeling freed by being able to write about his real problems and real life, Bennington holds nothing back in exposing his demons.
You know the voice. With Linkin Park, that voice has shared stages with Paul McCartney, Jay-Z, Alice In Chains, the Doors, Perry Farrell. It's won four American Music Awards, four MTV Video Music Awards, and two Grammy's, and headlined stadiums around the world. Right now it is the driving musical force behind the theme song to the biggest movie of the year, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. And it is a voice that is loved and revered by fans around the world. Yeah, you know the voice of Chester Bennington. And now, stepping outside of Linkin Park on Out Of Ashes, the first album from his new project, Dead By Sunrise - Bennington, Ryan Shuck and Amir Derakh, formerly of Orgy and current Julien-K members, Brandon Belsky, Elias Andra, and Anthony 'FU Valcic -Bennington gives fans a revealing look at the man behind the voice.

Track Listing

  1. Fire
  2. Crawl Back In
  3. Too Late
  4. Inside Of Me
  5. Let Down
  6. Give Me Your Name
  7. My Suffering
  8. Condemned
  9. Into You
  10. End Of The World
  11. Walking In Circles
  12. In The Darkness

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5942 in Music
  • Released on: 2009-10-13
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Customer Reviews

Chester on his own has a familiar sound4
So let's get this over quick. This is essentially Linkin Park, but darker and with no rap.

The good news is that if you like Chester in LP you will love him here. Great range and vocals over the entire album and an interesting side of the screaming front man to one of my favorite bands. So those that are worried don't be. There isn't a stinker in the entire album and from start to finish it is a good listen. You have some ups and downs (well, mostly downs) since this is a truly depressing album, but it is delivered in a way that will not immediately hit you as such.

Much like LP tracks on the first 2 albums were about break-ups, heartache, and finding yourself through the flaws, yet somehow they rocked, the same is true here. Despite the depressing subject matter, I had a good time with this album. Some standouts include: "Fire", "Crawl Back In", "Let Down", "Into You", and "Walking In Circles". Really though the album flows quite well and anyone in for some rock and decent radio friendly rock should give a listen.

Now the bad news. We've been here before. "Minutes To Midnight" from LP was essentially a Chester Album, much like conversely Fort Minor's "The Rising Tied" was Mike Shinoda's album and time to shine. See, since there wasn't that much Mike on "M2M", Chester who was predominately featured really rose to the occasion there. He basically gave us everything he had and it shows here. Nothing on this album besides a few clever hooks shows anything new from Chester and that is hard for me to admit.

I am a huge LP fan and love their overall philosophy and style when it comes to writing and recording their various tracks. This album, while technically great sounding and well produced, is extremely generic. Sure there is some decent guitars and back beats from the drummer but honestly we have heard this before from Chester Bennington. Those of us expecting a new direction or new style will be wholeheartedly mistaken. As was my issue with "The Rising Tied", the parts are so much better when they are whole.

Is it a bad album? Of course not. It is slickly produced and has some pretty good writing for the most part. Is it groundbreaking? The answer to that question as a firm NO. So for fans of Bennington and LP in general this is a must buy since it really does sound a lot like LP due to Chester sticking with the same genre and overall same writing style. The average listener of the Rock music will find something to like as well, just don't expect anything groundbreaking.

Think Linkin Park for adults.4
"Out of Ashes" is the debut album from Linkin Park frontman Chester Bennington's new band/solo act, Dead by Sunrise. Eschewing the rap-rock for some new wave and pop influences, "Out of Ashes" teams Bennington up long-time collaborators and electro-rock outfit Julien-K (which, incidentally, features ex-Orgy members Ryan Shuck and Amir Derakh) and producer Howard Benson.

In all honesty, most of it sounds like it could be the sequel to "Minutes to Midnight." It's exactly the kind of polished radio-rock you'd expect from producer Howard Benson, but that's not to say that it's bad. Actually, if you dug the balladry explored on the previously mentioned album, you're likely to be swept away by many of the softer tunes Chester and company break out on their debut affair. The gorgeous melodies of "Give Me Your Name" -- in spite of some cornball lyrics -- shows that the angsty young man who once penned the lyrical genius (ahem) that is "Shut up when I'm talking to you!" has grown quite substantially. Each of these songs -- many of which originated by Bennington strumming an acoustic guitar -- could be a hit in their own right, and show that outside of his safe zone, the man can actually write just simply good songs.

In fact, most of the album can be appreciated on the most basic level, provided you can forgive the massive amount of gloss Benson applies to the material. Underneath the layers of synthesized guitar and keyboards, the songs stand strong on their own merits. Take for example, "Let Down," a song that made its debut during the ReAct Now: Music & Relief concert in 2005. While the original, stripped down version was better, the song still sounds incredible and the emotion of the song -- as intended -- cuts right through you, despite the fact that it's been doctored to sound like an 80's pop throwback. Elsewhere, the album takes some turns that might appease the Linkin Park fan who was missing the more rocking element in the band's last affair, and on that end, "My Suffering" delivers.

While the bulk of "Out of Ashes" resists the urge to break the mold, it's still a well-played and well-produced piece of music with more than a few gems to unearth. You don't even have to be a Linkin Park fan to appreciate the music here, and it's not a stretch to imagine a song or two from this album crossing over to a completely different audience altogether. At the end of day, these are good songs and deserve to be heard by an unbiased ear.

Fresh Music, Linkin Park Style5
I was somewhat weary of Dead By Sunrise, because I did not know what to think. After purchasing the album I realized that the cd was amazing! I have fallen in love with the band and their sweet cd.