Taproot branch out on
Blue-Sky Research, collaborating with some notable outside songwriters and tweaking the nu-metal bludgeon of their first two records for a more melodic sound. There are still gloomy hard hitters here. "Facepeeler" and "Nightmare" feature unwieldy roaring and bleak sheets of distortion that frame atmospheric stretches, making the quartet sound like ambitious but samey
Deftones followers. But then there's "Violent Seas," a glimmeringly insistent modern rocker co-written with
Billy Corgan. It still broods, and breaks into anxious choruses. But it's also many times more accessible than any of
Taproot's previous work.
Corgan also co-writes "Promise" and the rousing "Lost in the Woods," while
Jonah Matranga of
Far,
Onelindrawing, and
Gratitude helps out on "Calling." The assistance is a plus for
Taproot. The songs still deal with bitter stuff like loneliness, obsession, and hearts being ripped from inside chests, and all the bellowing, brooding, and thick chording gets a little formulaic. But even without the hired guns
Blue-Sky Research is the most dynamic
Taproot album yet (the self-penned "So Eager" proves that), and the album's heightened textures and less predictable turns successfully updates the band's sound. By easing up on the plodding drudgery and letting Stephen Richards sing in a voice that sounds more like his own,
Taproot start to suggest moody but readily accessible post-grunge acts like
Breaking Benjamin or
Three Days Grace instead of the tired nu-metal past. ~ Johnny Loftus