his pained tunefulness and heart-on-sleeve lyrics don't exactly rewrite misery rock's rules, they do assert Staind as the grim genre's most song-oriented, downright sensitive band in years. As already demonstrated by "Outside," the acoustic hit from the Family Values Tour 1999 album, Staind don't need to split eardrums to open hearts. "I just needed someone to talk to," Lewis sings in "Fade," one of several woe-is-me tracks that would be wimpy if his buddies didn't kick butt. His sincerity is disarming -- and sometimes a little artless, as if he lifted rants directly from his diary. But the candid confessions and folksy melodiousness of "It's Been Awhile" nearly attain the poetic grace of a misery-rock milestone, Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun." With hits like this, Staind may become the first new-metal band to break the generational barrier as they cross over to pop radio. What will they whine about then? (RS 870 - June 7, 2001)
BARRY WALTERS
This Limp Bizkit-endorsed band manage to filter out some of the fury found on their debut album and replace it with melody for this follow-up from 2001. Filled with dysfunctional relationships, anger and even acoustic guitars, the album went to the top of the charts on the strength of the nu-ballad "ItÂ’s Been A While.