Review Summary: Unbreakable, but cracking.
15 records. ONE 'dust.
For a band with this much mileage, ONE isn't here to reinvent the Sevendust or heavy metal formula. If anything, it doubles down on it. Yet, there’s something slightly contradictory at play. At moments, this album sounds like a band rediscovering their primordial groove. At others, it feels trapped inside habits that have slowly calcified over the last decade. The frustrating thing is that the best material on here is -really- good, which only sharpens the contrast whenever the record falls back into its safer habits.
Musically, parts of this album absolutely rip. Sevendust remain A-league riffers, and the record is strongest whenever they stop chasing oversized melodic hooks and just let the bouncy parts breathe. Tracks like “One”, “Construct”, “The Drop”, and especially “Blood Price” thrive in that space. “Blood Price” in particular feels genuinely vicious in a way the band haven’t really sounded for years. The tri-vocal arrangement is classic Sevendust, and it’s easily one of the thiccest tunes they’ve done in a hot minute. Importantly, it doesn’t feel forced.
That’s not to say the melodic side of Sevendust is incapable. Lajon remains the band’s superpower. His voice still sounds incredible, his phrasing works, and he can make mountains through sheer tone alone. Even weaker choruses can land simply because he sells them so convincingly. Sadly though, this is also where the album’s necrotic underswell emerges. Lyrically, ONE is bizarrely undercooked. Some tracks drift into generic self-empowerment territory so broad and overfamiliar that they almost sound like a day out at the LLM factory. “Unbreakable” is probably the worst offender.
Production-wise, my feeling is that Sevendust are suffering from a chronic case of Baskette-itis. Elvis’ production style has become so recognisable and predictable that it flattens the identity of individual albums. In fairness, the sonics here are better than All I See Is War, which I still find borderline exhausting to listen to, mostly because of the overbearing kick drum. Comparatively, ONE sounds fuller and less abrasive. Yet there’s still a sense that the band are trapped inside a modern hard rock production template that smooths away some of their weirdness and personality.
Ironically, their last truly distinctive sounding album was probably Kill The Flaw, a self-produced record. That album felt more dynamic, deliciously bouncy, and more willing to let atmosphere and texture breathe. At risk of becoming a nostalgia succubus, songs like “My Ruin” from their self-titled record had a rawness and unpredictability that modern Sevendust rarely tap into anymore. Even a few acoustic moments, which Sevendust do immaculately, would have helped balance the dynamics. At this point in their career, the band needs a shake-up. Not because they’ve forgotten how to write songs, clearly they haven’t, but because the presentation is starting to feel polyester coated.
Now... addressing the elephant.
ONE, as we were warned, is an unapologetically spiritual album. Sevendust have never exactly hidden their Christianity, but here it is foregrounded rather than left to sit in the eyes (or ears) of the beholder. Lowery’s recent faith journey is all over this record. “Misdirection”, which bookends the album and features a rare appearance from John on vocals, borders on worship music. Unfortunately, it’s also one of the least interesting moments on the record. The more preachy the album becomes, the more it loses the ambiguity and emotional openness that used to make Sevendust resonate so broadly. They’ve always worked best when the emotion felt human and messy rather than doctrinal. Maybe it comes with the territory as a bunch of 50-something dudes doing their thing with little left to prove. Still, it’s a balance I don’t think they’ve landed here, and it’s potentially a risk for their broader appeal.
This is what makes ONE a solid but frustrating listen. There’s still a genuinely great heavy record hiding in here. The groove is alive, the band can still lock into a monstrous pocket, and Lajon continues to show us why he remains one of rock and metal’s great frontmen. However, the increasingly formulaic production, weak lyrical moments, and on-the-nose themes stop the album from fully reaching the level it constantly threatens to.