Their demo of ""Over My Head Cable Car "" ended up being one of the most-played songs of and set the band in motion. The group's piano-based pop rock easily slots in next to adult-contemporary favorites like Five For Fighting and David Gray without missing a beat. Singer Isaac Slade and guitarist Joe King write catchy songs that are earnest and upbeat in their general veneer, recalling both the heartland Americana of Counting Crows and the heart-on-sleeve emotional overload of Dashboard Confessional.
Sign In. Listen Now Browse Radio Search. How to Save a Life The Fray. She Is. Over My Head Cable Car. How to Save a Life New Version. A new version of Last. Music Rights are covered by collection societies and publishers. The images are for illustrative purposes only and are not contractual.
All musical material is re-recorded and does not use in any form the original music or original vocals or any feature of the original recording. All the songs on their debut, How to Save a Life, sound almost exactly alike and also exactly like you would expect -- sincere, melodic, authentic, and bereft of anything surprising or exciting.
This doesn't make for the kind of record that people will want to listen to over and over again but for modern rock, it isn't half-bad. The Fray try hard and they never really do anything offensive. You just can't picture them giving anyone chills, or kids text-messaging their friends to tell them about this great new band they just heard.
Sep 13, Apple Music Preview. This Denver-based quartet used a grassroots campaign of their local radio station and newspaper to land a major label recording contract. Listen on Apple Music. Their demo of 'Over.
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