This review covers the rock track Brother Cane – And Fools Shine On.
This track was released in 1995 on the album Seeds.
The track starts with some guitars. A lead guitar then comes in with short notes. A drum kit also joins the track. From there, the vocals join in for the first verse. Backup vocals then join the main vocals.
From there, the lead guitars come in as the vocals take the track into the first round of the main chorus. Right before the main chorus ends, the lead guitars revert back to the short notes.
After that, the vocals take the track into the next verse. Like the first verse, backup vocals join the main vocals part way through for a bit. From there, the vocals take the track into the next round of the main chorus along with the lead guitars hitting longer notes. The vocals extend the main chorus. This section is capped of with the usual short notes of the guitar as an instrumental.
From there, the vocals take the track into the next verse. The vocals then take the track into the next round of the main chorus. Slight modifications are made for this round in the vocals. Another instrumental with the exact same guitars cap that off. From there, the track just ends.
The track biggest strength is the main chorus. The vocals and guitars come together in a pretty good way to present something pretty solid.
From there, the track more or less falls apart. The vocals are a bit quiet on the verses. It can be hard to understand what is being sung in these sections.
Another problem is that there seems to be a mere two versions of the guitars. In both, they seemingly play out in the exact same way every time. As a result, the track gets a bit dry after a while.
Overall, this is a pretty average track. The main chorus is pretty good with the way the guitars and vocals come together. After that, the track goes downhill from there. The guitars only have two variations, so the track gets pretty dry after a while. The vocals are a bit hard to understand during the verses. So, while the track has a pretty solid strength, lots of elements pull this track back. In the end, an average track.
Score
5.5/10
Drew Wilson on Twitter: @icecube85 and Facebook.