
The transition between these heavy riffs and light electronic melodic lines is seamless and shows that Shinedown have outdone themselves once again.

Opening with a synth riff this track instantly creates a different tone altogether, the lighter texture within the verse allows you to focus on Smith’s vocals some more however, once the pre-chorus and chorus kick in this song becomes this heavily riffed rock anthem. Next up is ‘Black Soul’ which has quite quickly become a fan favourite. The chorus resonates power and confidence with a strong drum beat and use of power chords, the pre-chorus focuses heavily on Eric Bass’ bass line which instantly encompases the whole band into this wealth of power and strength. The track really sets the tone for the rest of the record with energetic riffs and strong vocals from Brent Smith, this song screams that this record is not to be slept on. The record opens with an atmospheric introductory track titled ‘The Entrance’ which sets up tension and readiness for the rest of the record with sounds of footsteps, doors opening and a sharp intake of breath which leads seamlessly into the first single off of Attention Attention, ‘Devil’.
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The blend however, works incredibly and proves that Shinedown know how to create an interesting record which can provide a different mood with each track. Attention Attention draws on influences from other musical styles such as more popular influences as well as giving off strong 80s vibes with more electronic elements.

The Jacksonville quartet have just released their 6th studio album and are currently on a US co-headline tour with Five Finger Death Punch with support from Starset and Bad Wolves. The band will kick off an extensive spring and summer tour on May 3 at the Beale Street Music Festival in Memphis, Tennessee.As a massive Shinedown fan this record has been very long awaited especially after the success of Threat To Survival. SHINEDOWN's latest album, "Attention Attention", came out last year and features the crossover hit "Get Up" and the new single "Monsters". But at the end of the day, man, you've gotta put it back on yourself you can't be a finger pointer." As long as there's respect between everyone in the party, then, really, the sky's the limit. We kind of weeded out the people that are not here for the right reasons for the band, and the ones that have been here for the longest amount of time, because they've been able to grow with us, and they themselves have been able to grow because of us. And the lucky thing for us, I would say, is that we have been in some really heavy situations over the years and some really scary situations. It just happens to be everybody in the audience. But I will one thousand percent always bring it back to the audience, which is very to the point with me. Now, in the same breath, there are a lot of people around us that are looking out for our best interests and really looking at the scope of the band and what we wanna achieve and how we wanna present ourselves to the world. "You have to be the master of your destiny. "The band always tries to have complete control of the schedule - whether it's studio, whether it's touring, whether it's certain events, red carpet, award season any of those things," he added.

"A lot of people look to me in the organization to have a lot of the answers, but it's also how I delegate certain things. So I think the person that I talk to the most - and some people might think this is a little odd, but it's true - I have to talk to the dude that's in the mirror every day.

"Because at the end of the day, it's always gonna start with you. "There was a comment made back in the early 2000s that basically said, 'More money, more problems.' And that depends on the individual, in my better judgment," he continued. There are a lot of 'yes' men and a lot of 'yes' women in the industry that's a given.
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"And you have to find out sometimes, and the best way is trial and error. "Life doesn't have an instruction manual," the singer said (hear audio below). SHINEDOWN frontman Brent Smith spoke to "Two Doods Reviews" about the rigors of nearly non-stop touring and how he and his bandmates stay grounded through it all.
