Songs to Scream at the Sun

Songs to Scream at the Sun is the second and final studio album by American hardcore band Have Heart. The album sold 3,254 copies in its first week and peaked at No. 193 on the Billboard Top 200. The band announced their breakup the next year.

Songs to Scream at the Sun
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 8, 2008
Recordedby Kurt Ballou, @ GodCity Studios, Salem, Massachusetts
GenreHardcore punk, melodic hardcore
Length21:01
LabelBridge Nine
ProducerKurt Ballou
Have Heart chronology
You Can't Go Home Again (EP)
(2006)
Songs to Scream at the Sun
(2008)
10.17.09
(2010)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Alternative Press (#242, p.154)
Decoy Music link
Lambgoat link
notPopular.com link
Punknews.org link
ThePunkSite.com link
Scene Point Blank link
Thrash Magazine8.8/10 link
Under The Gun Review link
Sputnik Music link

Reception

Reviews of Songs To Scream At The Sun were generally favorable. AllMusic's Greg Prato said that "in a day and age when it's arguably more common than ever to start softening your sound in hopes of crossover success, there's something quite noble in Have Heart's approach... And even when Have Heart take the intensity down a notch or two -- such as on the track "Brotherly Love"—it's still more intense than your average up-and-coming hardcore band," giving the album a 3.5/5. Casey Boland of Alternative Press had a similar review, noting that while the band's influences were obvious on 2006's The Things We Carry, "they now stir them into a unique sound."

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."The Same Son"0:58
2."Bostons"2:48
3."Pave Paradise"1:47
4."On That Bird in the Cage"2:11
5."Brotherly Love"2:50
6."No Roses, No Skies"2:22
7."The Taste Of The Floor"0:53
8."Reflections"1:13
9."Hard Bark on the Family Tree"2:58
10."The Same Sun"3:01

Personnel

Member quotes

"Songs to Scream at the Sun is the coming of age story. It's about the growing process of a young kid shaking the chains of selfishness, but it's everything about what you lose and gain in that process of growing up."

Patrick Flynn

References

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