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What Separates Me from You

A Day to Remember  Main Performer

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1 Sticks & Bricks Day to Remember/McK 3:16
2 All I Want Day to Remember/McK 3:22
3 It's Complicated Day to Remember/McK 2:57
4 This Is the House That Doubt Built Day to Remember/Gil 3:30
5 2nd Sucks Day to Remember/Den 2:27
6 Better Off This Way Day to Remember/McK 3:26
7 All Signs Point to Lauderdale Day to Remember/Den 3:17
8 You Be Tails, I'll Be Sonic Day to Remember/Den 3:47
9 Out of Time Day to Remember/McK 3:26
10 If I Leave Day to Remember/Gil 3:24
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What Separates Me from You

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Victory Records

Category: Pop/Rock

What Separates Me from You

UPC: 746105060326

Release Date: 11/15/2010

Original Release Date: 11/15/2010

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Sticks & Bricks, All I Want, It's Complicated, This Is the House That Doubt Built, 2nd Sucks, Better Off This Way, All Signs Point to Lauderdale, You Be Tails, I'll Be Sonic, Out of Time, If I Leave]
Contributors:

James Christopher Monger

The fourth full-length offering from Ocala, FL-based punk-pop/metalcore outfit A Day to Remember opens with vocalist Jeremy McKinnon screaming ?I am fueled by all forms of failure?. What Separates Me from You is whiney, petulant, immature, hopeless, and thoroughly addicting, as the ten songs contained within the gatefold packaging (with the not-so-subtle painting of a man on a busy city street, trapped in an hourglass as the sand piles up around him) are as immaculately crafted and engaging as they are blindingly self-absorbed. Produced by New Found Glory?s Chad Gilbert, WSMFY blurs the line between clean vocal emo-punk and throat-exploding metalcore with great success, especially on the more brutal offerings like ?Sticks and Stone?, ?2nd Sucks?, ?You Be Tails,? ?I'll Be Sonic,? and the guitarmony-laden album high point ?This Is the House that Doubt Built.? While mopey, melodic punk-pop jams like ?All Signs Point to Lauderdale? and ?Out of Time? may sound like second-rate Against Me! cuts, the performances are so flawless and the knob-twiddling (mouse clicking) is so dialed in, that the volume nearly goes up on its own. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi

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