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Old 07-27-2009, 12:24 AM   #21 (permalink)
VICTORY SCREEEEEEECH
 
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Originally Posted by Alfred View Post
(Requested by Antonio)

Clutch "From Beale Street To Oblivion"

Year: 2007
Genre: Rock/Blues
Length: 48:18

My first experience with the Maryland-based hard rock group Clutch was their rough, mopey, no frills debut album Transnational Speedway League. I had decided to give the band after Maylene & The Sons Of Disaster singer, Dallas Taylor, recommended them in an interview. Now, jumping ahead to their eighth album, From Beale Street To Oblivion, I see that I picked the wrong album to get into this band... but maybe that was for the better.

I was pleasantly surprised to see how far Clutch had come since their debut album. The change in the vocals, lyrics, and instrumentation is huge. Whereas the debut was a punk-influenced stoner rock album, this is a soulful, bluesy hard rocker, huge emphasis on the blues.

I've always had a thing for blues, and this album does the genre justice by revamping it with some modern heaviness to keep it all fresh. I'm not going to be a pretentious asswipe by pretending like I know the singer's name here, but whatever his mama called him, his voice sounds a million times better than that drugged-up grunt that I was used to hearing before. Not only is it an improvement, but he can sing the blues with the best of 'em.
Of course, instruments are another vital part of blues, and whoever does the guitar sure manages to pull off all my favorite blues-clichés (I mean this in the best way possible).

I got this album because I liked the single Electric Worry, it seemed like a pretty awesome and straightforward heavy blues song. But when I dug through this album and listened to the lyrics, I was amused at some of the things these guys write. When Vegans Attack is a favorite of mine:

Poking fun at underground hardcore, vegans, and everything in between = pure win.

So in conclusion, I won't lie and say that Clutch created what I'd call a masterpiece, but I will say that they pulled off (several?) an infectious, heavy blues record that is worthy of spending some time with. I dig the vocals, I dig the licks, I dig the lyrics, I dig the whole thing, and I'll probably listen to Clutch some more. Thank you to Antonio for bringing your clutch love to this forum, or else I probably never would have revisited them.

78%
Good
*muuuuahhhh* thank you as well.


but yeah, if you like that, you should also check out Robot Hive/Exodus, really bluesy and what i consider one of their best. Pure Rock Fury and Blast Tyrant are definately worth mentioning as well

i could PM some albums for you if you want
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mr dave
isn't this one of the main reasons for this entire site?

what's next? a thread made specifically to banter about music?

Last edited by Antonio; 07-27-2009 at 12:36 AM.
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Old 07-27-2009, 09:04 AM   #22 (permalink)
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Sure, that'd be great.
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Old 07-27-2009, 11:33 AM   #23 (permalink)
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ok, you can expect a PM shortly
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mr dave
isn't this one of the main reasons for this entire site?

what's next? a thread made specifically to banter about music?
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Old 07-31-2009, 09:44 PM   #24 (permalink)
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(NEW RELEASE)

He Is Legend "It Hates You"

Year: 2009
Genre: Hard Rock
Length: 57:34

I was pretty skeptical when I heard that He Is Legend was making a new album. I enjoyed all of their releases, their EP and their two full-lengths, but they never seemed to completely pull it off. Their weak lyrics, inconsistant vocals, and annoying filler prevented their previous albums from being truly great. As much as I liked the EP and "I Am Hollywood" they both had that sort of shittty scenecore vibe about them, and as much as I liked "Suck Out The Poison" the vocals were smokey, muffled, and occasionally annoying to listen to.

But this time they got it right. They nailed it. They found their sound.

While maintaining that sort of progressive quality that all of their releases have featured, "It Hates You" manages to be a lot less scattered and more methodical than previous releases. While previous work felt somewhat rushed, "It Hates You" is carefully formulated and exacted. The first thing that struck me as different when the engaging opener, Dicephalous came on was Schuylar Croom's vocals. High pitched on the first two releases, muffled and worn out on Suck Out The Poison, here they are captivating and powerful.

Another bad trend that plagued their earlier releases was the often piss-poor, generic, trying-way-too-hard-to-make-words-rhyme songwriting. It stuck out like blood on a white shirt. I guess ol' Schuylar learned a lot in his three year absence. He still rhymes, but he certainly makes it work a hell of a lot better than he previously attempted to.

Alongside being lyrically and vocally stronger than their previous albums, "It Hates You" is the heaviest release from the band so far. This is evident from the first track, Dicephalous with its fast pace, thick instrumentation and commanding vocal delivery. It also feels like they stopped dicking around and made sure that their melodies deliver the hooks. However, it's not just twelve big hard rock songs, many slower interludes, introductions, and bluesy leads are heard throughout the course of the album to mix it all up and keep it interesting.

"It Hates You" is a definite contestant for my pick of Album Of The Year 2009. Out of everything I've heard so far, no one has surprised me more than He Is Legend. I guess I never knew that they had it in them to make an album so solid, catchy, and well planned out. I'm sure that a band will come along and top them before the year is done, but regardless: well done He Is Legend on creating your first masterpiece.

90%
Masterpiece



Last edited by Alfred; 03-18-2010 at 10:27 PM.
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Old 08-04-2009, 05:40 AM   #25 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Alfred View Post

Now you might be wondering, how does this relate to music? Well, as I said before, her favorite bands are Rise Against, Mariana's Trench, All American Rejects, and 3OH!3. On paper, I should hate these bands. They're produced and appeal to a shallow-minded mainstream audience. Yet they produce the kind of hooks that you cannot help but enjoy. On a good day, you'll hear a song on TV or the radio and nod and hum along. On a worse day, you'll despise them, hate their guts. And when I add it all together, weigh all the positives and negatives... I dislike these bands. Such are my feelings towards this girl. For some reason, I've been attracted to her for a couple of years now, despite all the grief I have been put through. Now, after all this time, I don't want this anymore. She's not the kind of person I want. "Hooks" are decieving, substance is needed for truly good music, and truly good people.

I know this all sounds ridiculous and juvenile coming from a young teenager, but I don't really care. This is the only way I could relate music, my current emotions, and my even hatred towards society and pop culture. The bottom line is: you can tell a lot about a person by the music they like.

punkrockalfred’s Music Profile – Users at Last.fm

Form an opinion about me.
You can tell what kind of music they like.

Musical taste can tell you something about a person, but only the most shallow generalities, nothing that cannot be gleamed from one minute of small talk. And even this crops up mostly because of any stereotypical personality traits they have that caused them to associate with a particular subculture, not the best things to form a character judgement from.

I appreciate what you did with the story, introducing the personal element is what made it compelling, but what you described is a rather common type of teenage girl who enjoys the music enjoyed by the majority of teenage girls. It's more a matter of probability than insight, and offhand I could offer a multitude of counter examples.

I think as music fans who tend to eagerly seek out new sounds and explore genres, we tend to attach greater significance to taste than people who passively let the background pop music soundtrack their lives. We like to think we are perhaps more conscientious, but truthfully music is just a passion, and one that still works on primarily a visceral connection that can't be mapped to a person's deeper character.
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Old 08-04-2009, 10:34 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alfred View Post
(NEW RELEASE)

He Is Legend "It Hates You"

Year: 2009
Genre: Hard Rock
Length: 57:34

I was pretty skeptical when I heard that He Is Legend was making a new album. I enjoyed all of their releases, their EP and their two full-lengths, but they never seemed to completely pull it off. Their weak lyrics, inconsistant vocals, and annoying filler prevented their previous albums from being truly great. As much as I liked the EP and "I Am Hollywood" they both had that sort of ****ty scenecore vibe about them, and as much as I liked "Suck Out The Poison" the vocals were smokey, muffled, and occasionally annoying to listen to.

But this time they got it right. They nailed it. They found their sound.

While maintaining that sort of progressive quality that all of thier releases have featured, "It Hates You" manages to be a lot less scattered and more methodical than previous releases. While previous work felt somewhat rushed, "It Hates You" is carefully formulated and exacted. The first thing that struck me as different when the engaging opener, Dicephalous came on was Schuylar Croom's vocals. High pitched on the first two releases, muffled and worn out on Suck Out The Poison, here they are captivating and powerful.

Another bad trend that plagued their earlier releases was the often piss-poor, generic, trying-way-too-hard-to-make-words-rhyme songwriting. It stuck out like blood on a white shirt. I guess ol' Schuylar learned a lot in his three year absence. He still rhymes, but he certainly makes it work a hell of a lot better than he previously attempted to.

Alongside being lyrically and vocally stronger than their previous albums, "It Hates You" is the heaviest release from the band so far. This is evident from the first track, Dicephalous with its fast pace, thick instrumentation and commanding vocal delivery. It also feels like they stopped dicking around and made sure that their melodies deliver the hooks. However, it's not just twelve big hard rock songs, many slower interludes, introductions, and bluesy leads are heard throughout the course of the album to mix it all up and keep it interesting.

"It Hates You" is a definite contestant for my pick of Album Of The Year 2009. Out of everything I've heard so far, no one has surprised me more than He Is Legend. I guess I never knew that they had it in them to make an album so solid, catchy, and well planned out. I'm sure that a band will come along and top them before the year is done, but regardless: well done He Is Legend on creating your first masterpiece.

90%
Masterpiece

It always makes me really happy to hear when a band finds their sound. I'm definitely going to listen to this when I get a chance.

Well-written, too. Bravo. =3
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Old 08-30-2009, 12:29 PM   #27 (permalink)
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The Dillinger Escape Plan "Ire Works"

Year: 2007
Genre: Metal/Experimental
Length: 38:26

When the chaotic mess of Fix Your Face first entered my ears in February of this year, I expected more of the same from the rest of the Dillinger Escape Plan's 2007 full-length "Ire Works". And this would have been no bad thing either. The opening track provided all the awesome thrills and tempo changes that I expected to hear from the founders of "mathcore". This album was my first experience with the band, so you can imagine my surprise when the catchy pop song Black Bubblegum came on.

When the whole album was over and done with, all I could say was "what the hell was that?". I could barely remember anything I had heard in the forty minutes it took me to listen to the entire album. It was a huge mess of scream-laden structureless songs and pop hooks. And now that I've listened to this album many, many times, this verdict still holds true (in a more positive way). And after listening to all of The Dillinger Escape Plan's major releases, Ire Works seems a lot more special than it first did. They pretty much laid the groundwork for mathcore with Calculating Infinity, put a nice Mike Patton spin on it with Irony Is A Dead scene, took the Mike Patton influences and threw in many pop flavors with Miss Machine, and finally perfected it all with one big cohesive, monstrous album.

Many people might object to this comparison, but I see Ire Works as being The Dillinger Escape Plan's "London Calling" in that it's the band's finest album, it's incorporates many other elements while still maintaining the band's signature sound, and that there's never a bad moment on either album. Of course, being inaccessible to a large amount of music listeners, and incorporating too many pop elements for mathcore purists are things that hold the album down from being as highly regarded as London Calling.

But screw the purists. I have listened to other mathcore bands such as Botch and PsyOpus and all their music amounts to is stomach turning growl/feedback carnivals that rips off so much of Calculating Infinity it's not even funny. Not only do The Dillinger Escape Plan execute their mathcore in a tasteful, enjoyable way, but they also show much progression from their debut album, something so many other bands, mathcore or not, fail to do.

As a closing comment, I am going to go ahead and recommend "Ire Works" to just about everyone on this forum. I know most of you find this kind of music unbearable, inaccessible, or maybe you just plain can't take screaming. But even if you don't neccesarily enjoy it, most of you will be able to appreciate its merits, whether it be the eclectic mix of music, the complex, jazz-influenced instrumentation, Greg Puciato's freaking amazing voice, or the overall musical skill of the band. Just please do yourself a favor and listen to one of the greatest albums of our time.

96%
Masterpiece



Last edited by Alfred; 10-21-2009 at 10:58 AM.
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Old 09-25-2009, 09:59 PM   #28 (permalink)
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(album re-visited)

Alexisonfire

Year: 2002
Genre: Punk
Length: 42:16

Let's get one thing out of the way here: Alexisonfire's 2002 self-titled debut album dominates my life. The album is, in my opinion, forty-two minutes of the most pure raw passion ever put to hardcore punk. Many of you may groan because this is Alexisonfire, the same band that gave you "Boiled Frogs", but before there was safe radio post-hardcore, there was this. Cutting, razor sharp, energetic tunes that stick to you like leeches. From the depressing guitar riff of .44 Caliber Love Letter to the final shrieks of Pulmonary Archery, Alexisonfire is the finest record that five eighteen and nineteen year old kids could possibly make.

Alexisonfire's early sound is characterized by raw production, constant tempo changes, high-pitched guitar leads, harsh screaming, pretty backup vocals, strange but poetic lyrics, and powerful climaxes. Some of the songs sound like demos, that's just how punk rock and no-frills they were. During this time, they described their sound as "the sound of two Catholic high-school girls in mid-knife-fight" (you should take a look at their artwork and maybe read a few lyrics) and I think that this describes their sound pretty accurately.

You can tell that Alexisonfire weren't in it to make a quick buck at this point. And being as young as young as they were, a lot of their youthful energy, struggles, and artistic wandering made its way onto this album with no commercial goal in mind. Some odd things make their way on to the album such as a blood-curdling scream, death growls, and the following lyrics:

Quote:
Boxes of cats,
People with Taz tattoos,
Explosive personalities,
Self-centeredness,
Protractor from your new geometry set,
Inability to do math,
Geography.
Even in their randomness, they do paint an odd mental picture that only an artsy high school student could understand.

During the large amount of time that I have spent with this album, it has been relevant with me in one way or another, whether that be musical or lyrical inspiration, relevant lyrics, or the overall mood that it portrays. I wish that Alexisonfire made more albums like this, or even "Watch Out!" but Alexisonfire said it best in the absolutely terrible "Keep It On Wax" from their 2006 album Crisis. "Times change and people change with 'em". Or on "Old Crows" from Old Crows/Young Cardinals. "We are not the kids we used to be". I respect that Wade, but when I hear the painful gang-screaming on Waterwings, I wish you were.

98%
Masterpiece



Last edited by Alfred; 10-21-2009 at 12:52 PM.
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Old 10-18-2009, 01:17 PM   #29 (permalink)
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Propagandhi "Dear Coach's Corner"



I was never able to see eye-to-eye with Propagandhi when it came to politics and social issues. For one, I do have religious beliefs, something the band openly opposes, and two, they're outspoken vegans which I often get annoyed with. But when I heard that they wrote a song criticizing Don Cherry and the pro-army propaganda that everyone seems to enjoy associating with sports, I was intrigued and thought that I would finally download their album.

The song is from Propagandhi's newest release "Supporting Caste", which I downloaded almost purely so I could listen to this song. While the rest of the album is pretty good, nothing can compare to the lyrical quality, vocal performance, and catchiness of this song.



The main draw of this song is are its lyrics. The song is written in the form of a letter to Ron MacLean, Don Cherry's "foil", so to speak, in the Coach's Corner segment of Hockey Night In Canada. The letter starts off by describing singer Chris Hannah's experience at a hockey game in which he took his six-year old niece. There was an intermission that "paid honor" to the troops in which soldiers rappelled "down from the arena rafters". His niece asked why they had guns and he took her and left the arena. The letter goes on to criticize Don Cherry's pro-war comments on the program, and how he is not the kind of man children should be listening to.

The song is important to me because not many people are willing to criticize Don Cherry. To most Canadians, Don Cherry is a hero, due to his extremely patriotic stances and for being entertaining on Hockey Night in Canada. It restores my faith in Canadians that some people see him the way I do.

Last edited by Alfred; 10-18-2009 at 04:50 PM.
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Old 10-18-2009, 05:18 PM   #30 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alfred View Post
(album re-visited)

Alexisonfire

Year: 2002
Genre: Punk
Length: 42:16

Let's get one thing out of the way here: Alexisonfire's 2002 self-titled debut album dominates my life. The album is, in my opinion, forty-two minutes of the most pure raw passion ever put to hardcore punk. Many of you may groan because this is Alexisonfire, the same band that gave you "Boiled Frogs", but before there was safe radio post-hardcore, there was this. Cutting, razor sharp, energetic tunes that stick to you like leeches. From the depressing guitar riff of .44 Caliber Love Letter to the final shrieks of Pulmonary Archery, Alexisonfire is the finest record that five eighteen and nineteen year old kids could possibly make.

Alexisonfire's early sound is characterized by raw production, constant tempo changes, high-pitched guitar leads, harsh screaming, pretty backup vocals, strange but poetic lyrics, and powerful climaxes. Some of the songs sound like demos, that's just how punk rock and no-frills they were. During this time, they described their sound as "the sound of two Catholic high-school girls in mid-knife-fight" (you should take a look at their artwork and maybe read a few lyrics) and I think that this describes their sound pretty accurately.

You can tell that Alexisonfire weren't in it to make a quick buck at this point. And being as young as young as they were, a lot of their youthful energy, struggles, and artistic wandering made its way onto this album with no commercial goal in mind. Some odd things make their way on to the album such as a blood-curdling scream, death growls, and the following lyrics:



Even in their randomness, they do paint an odd mental picture that only an artsy high school student could understand.

During the large amount of time that I have spent with this album, it has been relevant with me in one way or another, whether that be musical or lyrical inspiration, relevant lyrics, or the overall mood that it portrays. I wish that Alexisonfire made more albums like this, or even "Watch Out!" but Alexisonfire said it best in the absolutely terrible "Keep It On Wax" from their 2006 album Crisis. "Times change and people change with 'em". Or on "Old Crows" from Old Crows/Young Cardinals. "We are not the kids we used to be". I respect that Wade, but when I hear the painful gang-screaming on Waterwings, I wish you were.

98%
Masterpiece
Not my favourite offshoot of Hardcore punk ( I still prefer the down and dirty sounds of the 80's) but this is a phenomenal album. They have never come close to this album at all in terms of raw power.
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