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Sep1
rc talk: Skillet’s Awake
Filed under: Ichthus Festival, Music, Religion, Reviews, album review, rc talk - Christian pop culture; Tagged as: Awake, Ben Kasica, Comatose, Hero, It's Not Me It's You, Jen Ledger, John Cooper, Korey Cooper, Lucy, Monster, review, Skillet
Skillet are drummer Jen Ledger, guitarist Ben Kasica, bassist and lead singer John Cooper and keyboardist and guitarist Korey Cooper. Photo courtesy Atlantic Records.
Review: Skillet’s Awake
On the surface, Skillet is just a four-piece rock ‘n’ roll band with a raspy-voiced lead singer.
But the Memphis quartet has done what a lot of raspy rock quartets would love to do: rise to the top of Christian rock and deliver yet another killer, accomplished album.
That’s because Skillet’s a raspy four-piece rock act that’s grown as musicians and songwriters. A very teen-targeted act, a lot of the group’s original core audience is now in college or careers - this is part of why The Older I Get, a hit off Skillet’s 2006 album Comatose, is such a big sing along at shows.Awake yet again gives original and new Skillet fans a lot to listen too as frontman John Cooper recognizes that songwriting is an abstract art. The band that once sang Jesus was, “the best kept secret of my generation,” and recorded an album called Alien Youth (in 2001) now writes with less specificity but the music is as interesting and compelling as ever.
It’s Not Me, It’s You returns to the theme of a teen trapped in an abusive family - well, that’s how you might read it in the context of past hits such as the anti-suicide anthem The Last Night. But lyrically, It’s Not Me is far less specific, but no less riveting: “Let’s get the story straight, You were a poison, You flooded through my veins.”
The physical album closer - digital versions come with some extras - Lucy is more oblique and compelling, a graveside conversation to a . . . a girlfriend? Wife? Child? The key is promise of a heavenly reunion, but like many other tracks here, it can move around the listener’s demographics and lifestyles.
Skillet is maturing, but certainly not running too far from its bread and butter, hard rock anthems like Hero and Monster, the first two singles, which were being previewed for fans on tour this summer.
Not that there aren’t new dimensions to the music. Skillet’s guitars usually grind and drone, but Ben Kasica takes a few sterling solos here, and on her first album, drummer Jen Ledger shows off some vocal chops.
Awake confirms Skillet isn’t just some old rock quartet. It’s a great rock quartet.
Note: Derek Webb’s Stockholm Syndrome, which we reviewed a few weeks ago, is out in stores today.


