Chocolate Kiss
Onethrutwelve


4.5
superb

Review

by eatdogs USER (6 Reviews)
July 25th, 2011 | 5 replies


Release Date: 1998 | Tracklist

Review Summary: A lost treasure from the 90's emo universe...

You ever find yourself discovering a certain band or artist that just blows your mind upon first listen? I mean, you ever felt like, “Holy heck, this needs to be heard by all!!!” Yeah, I’ve felt like that for some time in regards to a Georgia band called, Chocolate Kiss. You see, one summer day a few years ago before Modern Warfare 2 came out; I spent most of my time looking for this decade of certain music that slipped past me. I’m of course talking about 90’s emo and that ultimate realm of collective minded artists.

Digging through that emoisdead mediafire link that was unleashed a few years ago to the public was like discovering Atlantis. There was so much contained there that I was overwhelmed. Regardless, the nerd in me took the challenge and I spent many sleepless nights discovering lost treasures, and the Chocolate Kiss happened to be one of, if not the best out of the bunch. Forming in 1997, Chocolate Kiss was a group that contained scene veterans from bands such as, The Hal al Shedad and the wonderful, Car vs. Driver. What these people created was some of the most touching and emotionally significant music of that time, and no one seems to know who they are. (At least from what I’ve taken…)

The album I’m writing about here is their debut called, Onethrutwelve. I have to get this out of the way first, so upon first jam I thought this was a bit like The Promise Ring’s album, Nothing Feels Good, in the fact that the songs seemed to flow and jangle the same way. I also don’t mind slightly comparing this to Boilermaker and Christy Front Drive. (Comparisons are the stimulants of music critique…)

Opening track, “The Horizon Sky” sets things off with a nice buildup and the awesome singing of Matt “Catfish” Mauldon, whom you should know was the singer of Car vs. Driver. Guitarist James Joyce, of The Hal al Shedad, strums along nicely while second guitarist Bob Rob accompanies him and Kip Thomas keeps the drumming delicate and easy. Of note, they didn’t use a bass player until their fourth and last album, but hey that isn’t much of anything here because the music is tops. You know, I could go through more tracks and list highlights, but that seems boring right now. I don’t take this lightly, but I’ll say it anyway, every track on this album is perfect. I have no doubts in my words here. Every track is wonderful and needs your immediate attention. I love everyone and I can’t even begin to dissect them individually because I feel that would be a detriment to the band and what they accomplished here.

The blog, Beyondfailure, is dedicated to Georgia artists and there is a wonderful write up on these guys. I suggest you take a gander over there if you want to know more. Also, I posted on these guys in my own blog (not plugging…) and I was contacted by a few members who were glad I wrote them up. They even encouraged the fact that I was trying to get their music out there. They want people to know, probably even more than I do. We shouldn’t forget the past because we can learn from it. If you are craving that certain period that many say, “had better music and emotion” then The Chocolate Kiss are very much worth your time. Dig it…



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user ratings (2)
4
excellent

Comments:Add a Comment 
eatdogs
July 25th 2011


98 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

well sorry folks, but i can't seem to upload an image for this album. I've tried several times, but fail on everyone.



could someone perhaps help me with this issue???

Deviant.
Staff Reviewer
July 25th 2011


32289 Comments


As with just about everything on this site, the artwork has to be approved before it shows up. You can wait patiently, or you can link me the artwork and I'll put it on now

taylormemer
July 26th 2011


4964 Comments


I fixed your artwork, date, (1996 is now 1998), and added their other albums. Maybe you could review the rest now... Band sounds intriguing.

Joyce's blog seems cool as well.

Couple of things though,
"(Comparisons are the stimulants of music critique…)"
Probably don't need this.

"The album I’m writing about here is their debut called, Onethrutwelve."
Yes, I think we already known this.

Move away from the mind bubble commentary and move towards a more cohesive style; that will make your reviews more convincing, and more approachable. As of yet, we get you love this, but there's little to substantiate why anyone else would, unless they equally shared your enthusiasm.


eatdogs
July 26th 2011


98 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

nice, thanks taylormemer for the insight. yeah, i guess i was just too excited to finally review these guys and didnt' stop to think things through a bit more. oh well, it's all in the ether now. i don't look back...

eatdogs
July 26th 2011


98 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

"Couple of things though,

"(Comparisons are the stimulants of music critique…)"

Probably don't need this."



You know, I take issue with this just because I think it was a radically different way to describe something like the mentioned, "comparison" issue that everybody and their dog has to use on every review. (just about every review...) And my anology to stimulants, like muscle stimulants, is in regards to how a reviewer can "BEEF" up their piece by name dropping bands, but in the case with my review, I felt as if I had no good choice, being as how no-one may have heard of these guys...



But of course, this is all a matter of opinion and once you write something on the net, it belongs to everyone.



Soooooooo yeah, I guess I do take a look back ocasionally... 0_0"





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