20130513_seoulbeats_2pm2“Musical Growth” is a common phrase you hear around the music reviewing world, at least in most of the review sites that I have wandered upon.  It’s something that’s really hard to quantify because it implies that there is a sort of end you’re trying to reach as an artist, and where you start is never going to be that “end” everyone is looking for.  So when 2PM came out with the album with a very particular name, Grown, my first reaction was to expect an album that embodied a sense of metamorphasis, of moving forward.  Whether I got what I wanted is a very loaded question, because in many ways I did and in some ways I didn’t—and I’m not just talking about the sensual factor here.

First of all, looking at Grown as a single piece, it doesn’t make much of a splash. Actually, I liken it to a well executed dive; it’s mellow and it’s classy—with some understated flamboyance. Like SHINee‘s Misconceptions of Me, 2PM is not particularly innovative with Grown, though they do enhance their sound through what most of us call “maturity.” In other words, they’ve played their cards right by rooting themselves in the “familiar” while avoiding the “boring.” Grown is also extremely cohesive, which for me, is the make it or break it of any album. If an album is cohesive, then I’m going to give it the time it deserves in respect of the time and though the artist put into the album, even if I end up not liking it. I’m also partial to albums that have titles that are not just a title of a song.  (i.e. I don’t bother to give Sexy, Free and Singles a second glance, let alone a first one.)

The bottom line? Grown the album is well done—but how do the songs stack up individually?

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All Day I Think of You” (“A.D.T.O.Y”, or “하.니.뿐.”)

“A.D.T.O.Y.” exemplifies both the successes and the failures of 2PM.  The extremely apparent problem with the song is that in the context of Grown it shows very little “growth.” In fact, I think this song could get away with being in other 2PM albums (it fits in with “Without U”) and I wouldn’t think twice. It’s a bit dated, and a tad clunky (The robot voice? Not a fan.) As much as Jun.K may be my favorite 2PM member by galaxies, his ad-libs at the end/middle 8 just don’t cut it for me. It was flat, and failed to bring the song to the climax it needed.  I also wish Nichkhun didn’t get all those lines, because his falsetto is not the most pleasing of timbres.

Despite these negatives, I do actually like the concept of the song. For me, “A.D.T.O.Y” is all about expressing desperation at losing a significant other, even when knowing full well that the relationship is unhealthy.  This is why I loved the general structure of the song: the sensual undertones with the orchestra, the constant sense of urgency and build-up, the insane levels of repetition, the slightly strained falsetto, the excessive breathing in the vocals, the rap that was rough around the edges—even the fabricated feeling coming from the electronic voice. However, it’s for many of the same reasons that I found all the problems I did with the song. For the sake of the flow of the song, I wish robot voice was replaced with a human with slightly excessive auto-tuning (and removed at the end of the song to let the strings shine), so you can get the same effect without having the grating quality that the robot voice has.  This also applies to the “All Day/All Night” Vocal trade off with the Rap from Taecyeon, where reducing Taecyeon just a bit would have made the rap a little less jarring and enhance the trade-off effect more. I found the falsetto to be key to the build-up process, and to see the floor boards come out under it for nothing by the lackluster ad-libs was really disappointing. Overall, “A.D.T.O.Y” is best described as a huge “could have been.”

Come Back When You Hear This Song

“Come Back When You Hear This Song” is one of those entirely self-aware songs that knows that it’s going to be a single before it actually is written, and just tries too hard. Okay, I do admit the pre-chorus is beautiful, as is the piano, and the song does “grow” on you. I might be the only one who thinks this —but I really give “Come Back When You Hear This Song” a pass. It takes too much effort to like.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzJrOg0ccPs]

원점으로” (“Back to Square One”)

Now THIS is what “Come Back When You Hear This Song” should have been. It may be formulaic, but it’s engaging and pleasing by using the generic quality to its advantage. The song builds with the pre-chorus, the chorus has snap, the bridge soars, and that all culminates to an addictive song.  (So the rap might be crappy, but who cares? It only lasted like five seconds) This song doesn’t take itself too seriously, and I can actually put this on repeat unlike the former “Comeback When You Hear This Song.”  This is also the first song that JYP (The Asian Soul) doesn’t write (as is the rest of the album), which might *cough* be the reason it’s good *cough.*

I’m Sorry

This the big turning point in the album, where we truly leave the JYP penned mediocrity behind, and hit the gold in this album. This “lounge song” oozes sensuality, maturity, and clean composition. Those slides and slight harmonies in the chorus are to die for. For once, I don’t actually want to chuck the rap out the window, because here, it provides a nice break in all the “smooth like butter” vocal lines.

오늘부터 1일” (“Today Marks the First Day”)

If the last song didn’t convince you, I guarantee this song will slam you on the 2PM bandwagon before you even realize you’re on it. I have nothing to add. “Today Marks the First Day” is a gem.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tLGwyhxKOgI]

Dangerous

Just when I think 2PM can’t top the last two songs, they bring out “Dangerous,” a mellowed out upbeat number worthy of following “Today Marks the First Day.” It is another jazzy, sensual number, but it does stand out against “Today Marks the First Day” for it’s understated quality.

오늘 하루만

By the time we get to this song, I feel like I’ve heard parts of this song elsewhere in the album, and then I sort of lose interest. It’s almost as though I’m beginning to suffocate in the heavy, yet similar sound that pervades this album and I have to take a few minutes to free myself before continuing with the rest.

Game Over

If there’s anything that Jun.K knows how to utilize in his compostions, it’s an orchestra. “Game Over” tops “Alive”  in my books (though “Game Over” is not entirely by Jun.K) and is a favorite on the album, for it not only gives a slight throwback to the 2PM of another era, it brings back life and bite to album just as I begin to wander away from it.

Coming Down

This may be yet more sensual lounge-esque/elevator music, but I really like the composition and the dynamics of this song, because this one doesn’t try to drown me in its sound; rather, it provides some reprieve in little sections of crescendos within the song.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaT6hups-9Q]

고백” (“Go Back”)

“Go Back” is the last of the upbeat music before we close out the album with “Love Song” and “Suddenly,” yet it’s very restrained like the rest of the album. It may be just me, but “Go Back” sounds more like a Big Bang song than it does a 2PM song, not that it’s a bad thing.

Love Song

I really like the chorus in this one, but I really am getting tired of all the similar melodies.  I get disconcerted by the fact that I could mix up “Love Song,” “Coming Down,” and “오늘 하루만” way too easily.

문득” (“Suddenly”)

Jun.K, you seem to be writing all the right notes exactly when I need them, whether it’s “Game Over” or “Suddenly.” The latter is a song I can’t imagine anywhere else but as the closer of this album, and a very satisfying closer at that. I do think though, that it really, really, Really wants to be an OST, and under normal circumstances, I have to say that it could be be better composed.  However, I think that amongst the ubiquitous lounge music that I seem to be getting out of this album, an OST track, believe it or not, is really a breath of fresh air.

20130513_seoulbeats_2pm4Can I just say how ridiculously elated I am that Junho and Jun.K took the reins in producing and crafting this album? 2PM really nailed Grown in all fronts EXCEPT the two title songs! I really don’t understand what madness is going on in the headquarters of SM and JYP right now, because 2PM just did the same thing that SHINee did; meh singles, and an album of pure gold (though 2PM’s singles weren’t as craptastic as “Why So Serious?”)

So Grown rocked, but did 2PM actually grow? Keep in mind that growing musically and putting out a good album are not the same thing. As I said  before, 2PM did mature in their sound, and they do have tighter composition in this album than they ever had before. I appreciate how tasteful and restrained 2PM is in this album as opposed to the loud, flashy, and somewhat tacky Hands Up. However, the thing about Grown is that it’s best savored in the collective, rather than as individual songs. It also gets dangerously close in the second half to sounding all the same. To be honest, Grown is at it’s best on a rainy day when you just want to wrap yourself in blankets and read a book. I just never quite see myself seeking any one particular song on a regular basis, minus “Today Marks the First Day.”

In essence, 2PM is not quite at the grand metamorphosis my sky-high aspirations for them were hoping for. They need to learn to let music take a life of its own while loosely unifying all the components into a mosaic rather than just having a huge piece of pretty, but rigid glass. That said, 2PM are undoubtedly setting their feet in the right direction and moving forward with Grown—and for that, I could not be more pleased with their efforts. Like the boys said themselves, they age like fine wine; it’s just that they need a few more years in the cellar.

2PM, you have yourself a well deserved 4.2/5.

(YouTube, JYP Entertainment)