When Acceptance released their 2017 record, 12 years after their cult classic Phantoms, the band’s fans had mixed feelings about Colliding By Design. On the hand, listeners thought it was great to hear the vocals of Jason Vena and the riffs of Kaylan Cloyd and the moody atmospheric rhythm guitar of Christian McAlhaney all produced by the band’s “sixth member” Aaron Sprinkle. But some listeners didn’t like the pop direction the band took. In 2020’s Wild, Free the band offers less guitar, but Sprinkle takes the band further into the pop world, making the band feel even more distant from their 2005 classic.
1. “Midnight.” The album starts with a slightly musically underwhelming track. It seems that the record deals with Jason Vena’s romantic history, “Midnight,” perhaps addresses his divorce and how the singer was put in the spotlight when his ex became a constant on The Bachelor. The band filmed a video for the song.
3. “Release & Let Go” returns the band to guitars, but the emphasis is on Vena’s lyrics and the keys on the chorus. This is one of the few Acceptance songs with female-backing vocals. The lyrics explain that rather than holding onto a relationship that is over just to release it and let it go.
10. “At the Edge of the Earth.” Two of the songs on the record were co-produced by J. Hall. The last track on the standard edition of the album has an epic sound. It’s a kind of “Where the Streets Have No Name” closing, or on the record a neat wrap up to the issues presented in the record of lost love. In the end everything will be okay when “we meet in the fields at the edge of the earth.”



