Country: Italy
Style: Hard Rock
Rating: 7/10
Release Date: 3 Jan 2025
Sites: Instagram | YouTube
I've started off each day this year with a metal release from 2025 because I'm struggling to find a new rock album. Finally this one crossed my path, even though I know almost nothing about What About Tomorrow except that they're Italian, the band comprises of four musicians and they play hard rock in an odd variety of styles. Maybe they're versatile and maybe they haven't figured out what they want to sound like yet, but they're capable throughout this album, whatever influences they're manifesting at a particular moment.
For instance, after an acoustic guitar intro, Werewolves opens up, with elegant Iron Maiden-style guitar. The song doesn't stay there though. That's a bouncy riff and the hooks are far more in the Saigon Kick realm, a name that kept leaping to mind as I listened through. Big Brother has vocal phrasing that reminds of Danzig and especially Metallica. I'd say Diamond Head instead, but it's Metallica's Black-era guitar crunch that shows up on Moment of Glory and Kangarat, along with more James Hetfield-esque vocals. Namazu, on the other hand, sounds more like Extreme, with the lead guitarist channelling Nuno Bettencourt.
I should emphasise that all these influences are there in moments, often many of them, but never really full songs. Even Namazu, arguably the most consistently influenced song, starts out with a experimental section that's as jagged as the rest of the song isn't. There are a bunch of intros on these songs and they do a wonderful job of keeping us on the hop. Big Brother starts a bit jagged too, albeit not as much as Namazu, but Moment of Glory starts out with an agreeably funky bass and Kangarat opens with some sort of ethnic stringed instrument that I can't place. It feels more Indian than Japanese but it has the strong plucked sound of a koto.
The name I kept coming back to was Saigon Kick, partly because this is so diverse but also because anything Jason Bieler puts his mind to has a particular melodic flow, whatever else it's doing. It's what I heard so often here, perhaps most consistently on Desert Me but also in hooks all over the album, not only Werewolves and Kangarat. A lot of what goes down on Moment of Glory, its funky bass joined by a funky guitar and then sassy drums, could easily have been on a Saigon Kick album. And hey, I'm never going to complain about anything I can justifiably cite Saigon Kick on.
Given how these touches are often blatant, I'll hazard a guess that the songs I haven't mentioned yet are just as obviously influenced, just by names I don't know or don't recognise. Phoenix is the most tantalising of them, because I'm hearing seventies singer/songwriters, musical theatre and, almost inevitably, Saigon Kick again. However, the song itself doesn't sound like any of those and I wonder what the influence was. You Make Me Feel Down has a sleazy glam metal kick to it, albeit filtered down to rock rather than metal. I just can't place any particular band.
And that's fine, because the aspect I like most about this album is that it goes all over the map in fascinating ways. Whoever's listening is likely to catch this band here and that band there but the bands are going to vary based on our own tastes and backgrounds. Maybe these guys have no idea who Saigon Kick are and got their sound through another band. Maybe you'll hear those moments and know exactly who that would be, even if I don't. Such is the guessing game of influences.
Given that I know next to nothing about What About Tomorrow, I can't praise anyone in particular for their contributions. They do have an Instagram page, so I can see that they're all young, but it seems to have been set up in the last couple of months and they haven't got round to naming the band members yet. There is a mention that they used to be called Infills Chain and googling gives me a lot more information on them. But hey, are these two bands comprised of exactly the same four musicians? Inquiring minds want to know.
Whoever the lead guitarist is clearly knows what he's doing, whether it's Davide from Infills Chain or not. There are a bunch of strong solos here, with the one on Namazu perhaps the best, but not far ahead of the one on Kangarat. The vocals are strong too, but they do have the most derivative moments, especially the James Hetfield ones. There are a couple of moments on Big Brother and Kangarat where I started to wonder if I was listening to a cover of a song I'd never heard before. Both bass and drums are less flash but don't particularly seek moments in the spotlight, but they find them anyway, most obviously during the intro of Moment of Glory.
Their first Instagram post has "We know what we want know, so what about tomorrow?" as a sort of mantra. Ironically, I'm not sure they do know what they want know, because the only thing they need, I think, is a defining sound. The talent's there. The songwriting's there. The performance is there. I'm just not convinced they're themselves yet. I look forward to finding out who they'll turn into. Bring on volume two!
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