In the late 90s, there was a widespread massacre that happened in the music industry. The powers that were decided to put the melodic structure of a song to death. Instead of allowing the strong melodies to drive a song's appeal, sampling, beats and hipness became the warp and the woof. As a result as a built-in lethargy was birthed in many songwriters, as long as a song could be sampled a day's job was done. Unfortunately, such slothfulness has slipped into contemporary Christian music too. Songs started to sound the same save for the hype and beats. But thank God for groups like the Advice. Instead of relying on overstuffed poly-technicalities, they have decided to return to the mother's milk of fine song writing: prescient melodic structures. Trimming away the extra calories of any hyped out sonic trinkets, the songs are toned, tight and packed with well crafted words and tunes. Starting with Jared and Matt Houston with their buddy Jeff Madden on bass, they had started playing together at coffeehouses and churches since their high school days. By 2007, the Advice began to congeal with its identity crystallized. With Jeff Madden on bass, Aaron Bowen on keys, Sanchez Fair on drums, and guitars by the Houston brothers with Matt taking on lead vocals. This, their eponymous album, is their debut for Inpop Records (JJ Weeks Band, Jaci Velasquez and Tricia Brock).