Hawk Nelson Discography
Hawk Nelson's albums: Listen to albums by Hawk Nelson on Myspace, Stream Free Online Music by Hawk Nelson. Hawk Nelson cites itself as diehard believers in the transformative power of dreams, planning a course in musical expression underwritten by Biblical rooting. Watch videos & listen free to Hawk Nelson: Drops In the Ocean, He Still Does (Miracles) & more. Hawk Nelson was formed in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada in 2003.
Jason Dunn
About Hawk Nelson This young Canadian foursome was plucked from obscurity by fellow Petersborough, Ontario, native Trevor McNevan of the band Thousand Foot Krutch. McNevan introduced them to his band's label, Seattle-based Tooth & Nail, then teamed with Aaron Sprinkle to co-produce Hawk Nelson's 2004 debut, Letters to the President. Their pop-punk sound caught on with Christian audiences and beyond (imagine a friendlier, happier Green Day), and soon the boys were on their way.
In 2005, the band appeared on the big screen in Yours, Mine and Ours. Promotions with NFL Sunday Night Football, Tom's Shoes and McDonald's followed. Longtime drummer Aaron Tosti left the band in 2007, but the current lineup (frontman Jason Dunn, Jonathan Steingard, Daniel Biro and newcomer Justin Benner) has carried on nicely, continuing to win friends and fans wherever they go.
Aaron Tosti
Wendy Lee Nentwig. This young Canadian foursome was plucked from obscurity by fellow Petersborough, Ontario, native Trevor McNevan of the band Thousand Foot Krutch. McNevan introduced them to his band's label, Seattle-based Tooth & Nail, then teamed with Aaron Sprinkle to co-produce Hawk Nelson's 2004 debut, Letters to the President.
Their pop-punk sound caught on with Christian audiences and beyond (imagine a friendlier, happier Green Day), and soon the boys were on their way. In 2005, the band appeared on the big screen in Yours, Mine and Ours. Promotions with NFL Sunday Night Football, Tom's Shoes and McDonald's followed.
Longtime drummer Aaron Tosti left the band in 2007, but the current lineup (frontman Jason Dunn, Jonathan Steingard, Daniel Biro and newcomer Justin Benner) has carried on nicely, continuing to win friends and fans wherever they go. This young Canadian foursome was plucked from obscurity by fellow Petersborough, Ontario, native Trevor McNevan of the band Thousand Foot Krutch. McNevan introduced them to his band's label, Seattle-based Tooth & Nail, then teamed with Aaron Sprinkle to co-produce Hawk Nelson's 2004 debut, Letters to the President. Their pop-punk sound caught on with Christian audiences and beyond (imagine a friendlier, happier Green Day), and soon the boys were on their way. In 2005, the band appeared on the big screen in Yours, Mine and Ours.
Promotions with NFL Sunday Night Football, Tom's Shoes and McDonald's followed. Longtime drummer Aaron Tosti left the band in 2007, but the current lineup (frontman Jason Dunn, Jonathan Steingard, Daniel Biro and newcomer Justin Benner) has carried on nicely, continuing to win friends and fans wherever they go.
About Hawk Nelson This young Canadian foursome was plucked from obscurity by fellow Petersborough, Ontario, native Trevor McNevan of the band Thousand Foot Krutch. McNevan introduced them to his band's label, Seattle-based Tooth & Nail, then teamed with Aaron Sprinkle to co-produce Hawk Nelson's 2004 debut, Letters to the President. Their pop-punk sound caught on with Christian audiences and beyond (imagine a friendlier, happier Green Day), and soon the boys were on their way. In 2005, the band appeared on the big screen in Yours, Mine and Ours. Promotions with NFL Sunday Night Football, Tom's Shoes and McDonald's followed. Longtime drummer Aaron Tosti left the band in 2007, but the current lineup (frontman Jason Dunn, Jonathan Steingard, Daniel Biro and newcomer Justin Benner) has carried on nicely, continuing to win friends and fans wherever they go.
Wendy Lee Nentwig.
Every so often you find that something doesn't have to be radically different to be satisfying. Like a great hamburger or romantic comedy at just the right time, sometimes an album comes along that is familiar and poppy, but still very good in its context. Diamonds is that kind of album. Hawk Nelson made a bit of a stylistic turn (but not as radical a departure as it may appear) from pop-punk to mainstream contemporary CCM with their last album, Made. But that album contained its punky moments and overall energy.
Daniel Biro
Likewise with Diamonds, an album chock-full of bouncy, infectious nuggets that may not re-write the pop playbook, but are excellent and solid nonetheless. The title track is the best thing here, and it kicks off the album with a dose of rhythmic goodness and vocal gymnastics on the part of front man Jonathan Steingard. Reminiscent of the band Fun, 'Diamonds' is the kind of tune that is both a bit of a departure for the band and instantly arresting. It will no doubt make a great concert number for many years and festivals to come. Lead single 'Drops In The Ocean' employs another interesting rhythmic dynamic, and features the album's best lyric in the chorus; ' if you want to know how my love can go, just how deep, just how wide, if you want to see how much you mean to me, look at my hands, look at my side, if you could count the times I say you are forgiven, it's more than the drops in the ocean.'
With a great message and a solid delivery, 'Drops' soars in all the right ways. The fun 'Just Getting Started' features a clever hand-clapping rhythm, slight bass solo and a happy, chirpy keyboard line in the chorus that lift the whole tune up a notch or two. 'Live Like You're Loved' is a shouted anthem of recognition that in Christ we are free and loved, and sometimes the challenge is to believe it.
Unfortunately, the following few tunes after this seem like lost Backstreet Boys tunes circa 1998. 'Sold Out' is both slightly cloying and overly-confident in its lyric about being ' on a mission that is heaven sent' with a soul that ' is like a stadium' (in that it is sold out, like a concert or sporting event). The fact that this dud of a song comes after four particularly good ones is disappointing and a bit mystifying. Likewise, the well meaning 'Thank God For Something' suffers from a few juvenile lyrics, such as ' you gotta' see the good if you're good at looking.' Thankfully, the album rights the ship a bit in the last few songs. 'Straight Line' has the same message as 'Sold Out,' but delivers it in a slightly more humble way. 'Made To Live' makes great use of a crowd of voices, and these multiple voices add a unique twist to the song, lifting it into a praise and worship moment that is welcome.
'Only You' ends the album nicely with a quieter, reflective moment of worship and a bit of silent space. With a few mis-steps aside, Diamonds severs up a meal that is hearty, well made and worth your time to hear. Review date: 3/15/15, written by of Jesusfreakhideout.com.
While more than a few Christian music connoisseurs have decried the current glut of pop/worship-oriented artists whose songs and lyrics sound similar enough so as to be virtually interchangeable, many of those same devotees seem to have reserved a particular ire for artists like Hawk Nelson whose current light pop offerings were preceded by years of decidedly harder-rocking fare. But, while it's hard not to miss the raucous, good-natured punk/rock energy of early HN chestnuts like 'Bring 'em Out' and 'Things We Go Through,' the group's latest, and decidedly more pop-inclined, effort isn't nearly as out-and-out awful as the legions of dyed-in-the-wool punk purists would have us believe.
To be sure, cuts like 'Drops in the Ocean,' the title track and 'Just Getting Started,' with its infectious, early-era B-52's guitar effects and custom-fit-for-jumping-rope rhythms, are hands down winners, taken on their own, more subdued, merit. Likewise, the positive, uplifting lyrical slant that saturated the dearly-loved freshman and sophomore outings has never really faded away, as evidenced by songs like 'Live Like You're Loved' and 'Sold Out,' the latter of which, despite sounding like a cross between a late '90s boy band and a high school pep rally cheer, winds up being an unlikely triumph. That said, even without the group's superb punk albums as a point of comparison, too much of the new album winds up being more off-putting than impressive. Songs like 'Thank God for Something,' while undoubtedly ebullient enough, are largely frivolous and just a bit too sunny and cheerful for their own good.
Conversely, the leaden tempos and sluggish rhythms of cuts like 'Drops in the Ocean' mire the lackluster tracks in musical quicksand from the outset. Perhaps most telling, though, is the fact that, like Made before it, the majority of the latest record leaves very little lasting imprint, making Diamonds a pleasant enough project, but one that only hardcore fans will need to purchase.
Review date: 3/16/15.