7/15/08

All souls can fly...



Soulfly - Conquer [2008]

After their last album The Dark Ages,Soulfly rose in my eyes.Normally my expectations for this album were high,and by the time the first track was over i came to one conclusion...Max does it again ! I'm gonna pick this sucker up...

7/14/08

No comment...

The 'groove' in 'groove metal'



Droid - Droid (2007)

Droid is a groove metal band with death metal influences,they have released only one album until now that i find great.Listen to songs like "My Oath","Built To Last" and "No Gods No Master",they're truly adrenaline fueled and heavy as shit...but hell the whole album is all killer no filler.

"Talk about being in the right place at the right time -- the way Long Beach, CA metallists Droid got signed was by playing a show at the Whisky-A-Go-Go, which was attended by Korn guitarist Munky. It just so happened that the man known for his admiration of seven-string guitars was also scouting bands to sign to his about-to-be-launched label, Emotional Syphon Recordings, and Droid was the first act to get the nod (and as an added bonus, getting to tour with Korn before having any recordings in the shops). Which brings us to their 2007 self-titled debut -- with none other than Munky serving as "executive producer." With all these Korn-konnections, it shouldn't come as a surprise that Droid's sound at times reflects their big brothers during their irate moments -- but they're more of a straight-ahead metal band (few artsy fartsy bits reside here). In fact, judging by such ditties as the album opening "The Resurrection" and "God of Anger," the quintet isn't bashful in breaking out the death metal (especially the group's growler/screamer, James "Buddy" Eason). And wouldn't you know it, another Korn-approved pal drops by for a bit -- Deftones' singer Chino Moreno -- on the bash n' rager, "Vengeance Is Mine." This is one Droid whose power supply appears to be bubbling over with anger."(review from allmusic.com)

7/13/08

All you need is a long beard,cheap glasses and a guitar...



ZZTop - Tres Hombres

A blues-rock classic,a masterpice,those are just two tags that perfectly describe ZZTop 's third album,Tres Hombres.In my opinion this is ZZTop's best album,cause it almost makes you forget that this band released synth-pop influenced songs like "Legs" and "Gimme all your lovin'".

"res Hombres is the record that brought ZZ Top their first Top Ten record, making them stars in the process. It couldn't have happened to a better record. ZZ Top finally got their low-down, cheerfully sleazy blooze-n-boogie right on this, their third album. As their sound gelled, producer Bill Ham discovered how to record the trio so simply that they sound indestructible, and the group brought the best set of songs they'd ever have to the table. On the surface, there's nothing really special about the record, since it's just a driving blues-rock album from a Texas bar band, but that's what's special about it. It has a filthy groove and an infectious feel, thanks to Billy Gibbons' growling guitars and the steady propulsion of Dusty Hill and Frank Beard's rhythm section. They get the blend of bluesy shuffles, gut-bucket rocking, and off-beat humor just right. ZZ Top's very identity comes from this earthy sound and songs as utterly infectious as "Waitin' for the Bus," "Jesus Just Left Chicago," "Move Me on Down the Line," and the John Lee Hooker boogie "La Grange." In a sense, they kept trying to remake this record from this point on -- what is Eliminator if not Tres Hombres with sequencers and synthesizers? -- but they never got it better than they did here."(review from allmusic.com)

7/11/08

I need some food...


Zico Chain - Food

A hard rock trio from UK...not much to say about this band except the fact that it rocks !

"
Feeding off the meat of Metallica, Tool and Mudhoney for years has led up to a rough n’ ready, rugged and garish debut album that builds upon a concrete base of tempo switching guitars and the gnarly, grizzly vocal leanings of Chris Glithero. Right from the ironically titled ‘Pretty Pictures’, The Zico Chain build in eerie atmospheric, instrumental deviations driven from a foundation of throbbing and menacing bass, and so begins Food. The latter element is also provided by Glithero who controls the tempo and the mood adeptly with his varied contributions. A love of 80s alternative music seeps through this eleven track stomp that features spasms of paranoid release and intense build-ups. The racing title track oozes youthful bemusement and the James Hetfield in Glithero comes crashing out. For a trio, The Zico Chain possesses variety and bite from the hounding 80s, garage rock veined ‘Roll Over’ to the haunting and metallic tinged ‘Preach’. For the latter jaunt, the lyrical simplicity that speaks of megalomaniac tendencies bears out best the vocal range on display, as a soft and sombre touch gives the frantic howls that often follow, more poignancy. Guitar fluidity is on refreshing display for the downtrodden ‘No Hoper Boy’, it draws attention away from the slightly clichéd and uninspiring lyrics.

‘All Eyes On Me’, represents the biggest departure for this tortuous trio, in the form of the racing rockabilly style instrumental commencement and the post-grunge, mournful kick that builds in later on, as the vocals get throatier and deeper. Lyrically speaking, it is the deepest that Zico gets and it bears out searching, coming of age poetry. The album gets lyrically stronger as it progresses and the clanging percussion and churning guitar driven final track ‘Anaemia’, sets things up neatly for Glithero to authoritatively spill out a tale of bewilderment. The stop and start nature of the track adds to the drama and gives it a slight rock opera feel. ‘Food’ is a debut full-length that is probably going to grow in critical acclaim, as this fledgling band grows and produces more albums. It will certainly be one to look back on and is a step towards justifying the saviour of British rock tag that is being slapped on them, by desperate commentators looking for life and fight in this discipline."(review from http://www.musicemissions.com)

7/6/08

Rock'n'Rollin' with the Death



Entombed - To Ride,Shoot Straight and Speak The Truth...(1997)

I'll say just three words..Instant Classic..owh wait those were two.

"This review may seem somewhat dated as this release has been available on import since March, but with the good people at BMG giving _To Ride..._ the domestic treatment here in Canada I thought I'd review it. Not to mention that this was one of the best records of 1997; those who haven't heard this gem of a record should keep reading. _To Ride..._ truly embodies the phrase "death n' roll" as it has been accurately described. Simply put: this rocks! The guitars are still heavy (check out the opening title track) and L-G's vocals are as powerful as they've always been. Tracks such as "Like this with the Devil", "Damn Deal Done" and the rampaging closer "Wreckage" (the name of Entombed's new EP) show how Entombed have grown and can still belt out some heavy ditties. Production-wise this sounds a little rougher than the band's last outing _Wolverine Blues_, but then again, who says rock and roll was pretty? Entombed are a force to be reckoned with, so those who haven't picked this up yet are urged to do so immediately. As for what's happening with the band now? The latest news is that drummer Nicke Andersson has left the band to devote his time to his other project The Hellacopters. Plans for Entombed to play North America haven't as yet been cancelled, so early next year you may be able to see this band crush at a club near you. In the meantime, check out their last release and bask in the heaviness that is Entombed."(review from chroniclesofchaos.com)

7/5/08

a new kind of breed...CROWBREED



Kingdom of Sorrow - Kingdom of Sorrow

Kingdom Of Sorrow is a nice combination of Jasta and Windstein's other bands. It has elements of harsh and fierce metalcore, but also a southern metal/stoner groove. You'll hear slow to mid-tempo songs with a lot of melody and a lot of aggression along with metallic hardcore influenced, breakdown infused brutality.

7/4/08

Thrash is not dead...yet



Evile-Enter The Grave (2007)

This album is a straight forward thrash album,it has everything you can expect from one :speed,horror and brutality.

"TTTHHHRRRAAASSSHHH!!! When you have a band member wearing an ONSLAUGHT shirt in the back cover of the promo copy...well, let�s start with a 6/10 grade by default (even if the CD is blank inside), huh! I don�t know if there actually is a UK New Thrash Wave floating round in the island (I�d be informed by now...) but with EVILE and "Enter The Grave" let�s start one (again), you muthas!

Britain is honored to have developed most (if not all) Metal styles. It is also pointed as diminishing them after some years, to develop the next one(s). Anyway, in �extreme� Metal terms there are not much to chat about UK�s contribution since names like ONSLAUGHT, ACID REIGN, SABBAT, XENDRIX, WARFARE and (influential or influenced) VENOM, NAPALM DEATH and CARCASS speak for themselves. EVILE breath life for not more than a handful of years but seem rather confident for a first album and - if things move on naturally - Britain has just obtained another Thrash star.

The Drake brothers have done a helluva job in the guitars section, with tons of old-school riffs spreading like hell, accompanied y demonic soloing and firing leads. Matt�s hands are more than steady, bringing on headbanging chords while Ol has studied a lot his lessons in violence �penned� by his favorite 80s Thrash Metal teachers. As regards the rhythm section, Mike Alexander is 100% pounding (even if I�d like his work to be more in-the-front) while few can be said �bout Ben Carter�s drumming. Complex yet imminent, powerful but sharp, he likes Dave Lombardo a lot and he�s a strong �ace� in the band�s ranks.

The songs themselves will fulfill your 80s Thrash needs by default. Riffs, breaks, grooves, speed, evil singing, lunacy, mid-tempo moshing, soloing paranoia, extreme harmonies, etc. No tune stands way ahead from the others, but I did bang my head endlessly to the monstrosity of "Thrasher", "Man Against Machine" and "Armoured Assault". EVILE perform great music that sounds fresh enough, even if bringing mega bands like SLAYER (mainly), ANNIHILATOR, (old) METALLICA, (mid) SEPULTURA, SACRED REICH and (80s) EXODUS to mind. One reason for this result being the band�s intelligence in avoiding the �retro� trap by demonstrating enhanced individual playing, the other one (and a strong promotional tool) can as well be the man in charge of "Enter The Grave"�s production. Flemming Rasmussen (METALLICA, PRETTY MAIDS) handles the production and you will feel his magic touch first thing at night (when you should naturally listen to the CD for the first time).

August 27th (Europe) and September 25th (USA) are the dates you�ll be looking for your next �anticipated� CD release. EVILE hail from Britain, their Thrash Metal music is US-inspired and - with sufficient support - "Enter The Grave" can turn out to be a �classic� debut in the thrash Metal series of musical violence in our beloved music, plus the band (if achieving to remove some of the enough SLAYER components in the future) can eternally, from now on, fulfill our needs for pure...hmmm...huh... TTTHHHRRRAAASSSHHH!"(review from metal-temple.com)

Remember the bullseye Les Paul ?




Zakk Wylde - Demo Tape For Ozzy (1987),Book Of Shadows (1996)

Everybody knwos who Zakk Wylde is so i'll just skip the introduction...the first thing i've posted is the demo Zakk recorded for Ozzy way back in 1987.You can see why Ozzy chose him,he masters the electric guitar as much as he does with with the classic.The second release is his first solo release,Book of Shadows.It's some kind of southern-folk rock,with a lot o acoustic guitars and crap...

"A largely acoustic offering from the former Ozzy/Pride & Glory guitarist, this disc was originally released in 1996, then reissued in '99 on Spitfire Records with a second, bonus CD. There is sometimes a Southern, P&G feel, but mainly what you have is a unique atmosphere and ambiance that is created in no small part by Wylde's soulful, yearning vocals. This release really showcases those abilities, much more so than any of his other projects, in fact.
"Sold My Soul" has a great chorus and mood, with a kick-in electric solo. Both "Road Back Home" and "Throwin' It All Away" are good, with "1,000,000 Miles Away" having an electric-fueled rhythm flow.
"What You're Look'n For" has that classic Southern acoustic feel, "Way Beyond Empty" is a heartfelt tune, and the very laid back "I Thank You" has a surprising, back-breaking distortion crunch hidden within.
From the bonus disc, all three tracks are calm and serene."(review from metal-reviews.com)

Something more different from Matt...



Kalas - Kalas

This is a band founded by Matt Pike after the disbanding of Sleep and before High on Fire.They haven't actually released something during that time,the selftitled album was released in 2006..i know it's hard to imagine,but Matt only handles vocal duties,and it's harder to imagine that this band plays a kind o deep,emotional metal..when Matt Pike's voice sounds like a tortured Lemmy.Actually his voice fits fine with the music which is great.I believe you guys are gonna enjoy this one.

"Stoner Metal is a genre often associated with blaring volume, slow tempos, and hypnotic, pounding, Sabbath influenced riffs. The genre was popularized by bands like Kyuss and Electric Wizard(for a more Doom feel), however no band reigned supreme over the legion of stoners like Sleep and its leader Matt Pike. After breaking new Stoner ground with Jerusalem and Dopesmoker, Pike found himself in the most popular and respected Stoner Metal band. He became famous for churning out crushing riffs over a feedback haze and taking long experimental solos with the help of his hypnotic rhythm section. Pike went on to form High on Fire, another well respected and popular Stoner Metal Band. High on Fire brought in a more technical and modern rock associated feel, however it was not a serious departure from his work with Sleep. It was not until 2006 that Matt Pike would finally fulfill his creative potential, slashing away the ties of his Stoner Metal past and creating his finest album and band to date, Kalas.

Kalas has only managed to release one CD so far; however they have already cemented a place in Stoner Metal history. Since bearing the name of Matt Pike earns instant gratification in genre, the release of their self titled debut was highly anticipated. Furthermore, questions of the sound that Kalas would possess were buzzing everywhere. Nobody wanted Matt Pike to create the same band yet a third time, and it was obvious that in order to regain his place in the metal world he would have to make some drastic changes from his previous work, and he came through 100 percent. The first major and most apparent difference with Kalas is the production. The sound is much tighter and well produced, with all the instruments being perfectly audible. From the second the Bass and Guitar come crashing in at the 18 second mark of Monuments to Ruins, the band embodies a monumental force which slowly trudges over Matt Pikes raspy vocals. Gone are the fuzzy freakouts and incoherent feedback of Sleep, Kalas’s sound is tight and clean, an instrumental behemoth that shatters anything in its path. It is also obvious that Pike has matured as a musician throughout his years as an artist. Kalas possesses none of the immature subject matter so common in Stoner Metal. There isn’t a single song solely dedicated to Marijuana! Although the Sacred Leaf was embraced by many years ago, it is hard to take bands which revolve around it as their sole creative supplement seriously, and thankfully Matt Pike chose not to dwell on it too much for his new band. Subject matter revolves around corruption, rebellion, personal dilemma, addiction, journeys, and self discovery. Yes, Matt Pike’s writing has indeed come a long since the days of Sleep. Surprisingly, a large portion of the disc is quite catchy(Voyager), with head banging riffs and commanding vocals. But by far, the most interesting new aspect of Kalas’s sound is the all new atmosphere they have introduced. Breaking completely away from the Stoner Metal trend, they have adopted a progressive rock feel extremely reminiscent of Isis. Placed all throughout the CD are intros and bridges which rely on clean guitar playing and arpeggios to bring a whole new sound to the table. Take a listen to a track like Frozen Sun or Due Time to see what I mean. These sections are not only enjoyable and extremely well done, but build up the heavy sections and climaxes to be that much more enjoyable.

Apart from a change in sound, Kalas have also upped their technicality and songwriting ability. Although the band is largely the brainchild of Matt Pike, don’t underestimate the talented band of musicians which accompany him. Pike also does not play guitar in Kalas, so he is responsible for little of the instrumentation and excellent solos. Although Pike is the only well known artist in the group, his fellow musicians are famous around the East Bay Area, hailing from bands such as Econochrist, Grimple, Samiam, Medication Time and Cruevo. Brad Reynolds on the Bass guitar has countless riffs and grooves that cement an excellent foundation for his fellow guitarists Andy Christ and Paul Kott. Christ and Kott cover everything from traditional downtuned powerchord assault to ambient clean passages. There are so many excellent riffs in this CD that just make you move. The solos are great throughout the disc, always fitting the song and never falling into self indulgence or excessiveness. They are tasteful and technical, setting a new standard for Stoner Metal to come. Scott Plumb on the Drums keeps the music crawling along, but he really shines on the softer sections with interesting patterns that give the music an extremely rhythmic feel. Once again, think Isis.

Matt Pike and Kalas have created what I consider to be one of the best and diverse Stoner Metal albums ever released. It is even hard to classify it as Stoner Metal since so many other influences are brought up on the table, however Pike’s identifiable vocals and the crushing groove force it into the genre. Combining the traditional Sleep sound with more modern influences like Isis proves to be a massive success and with improved recording, technicality, and songwriting Kalas has created a Stoner classic that is unique, heavy, and shockingly catchy. The only real downside which keeps it from being classic is that so much of the sound has already been done before. Sleep would never have been capable of writing something this diverse and magnificent, it is a must-have for fans not only of Stoner Metal but of Metal and Rock in general. It satisfies on so many levels, bringing the groove time and time again that I spin it on my CD player."(review from sputnikmusic.com)

From the Homme/Goss family




Goon Moon - Licker's Last Leg (2007),The 5:15ers (live arthurball)(2007)

Goon Moon is a industrial rock band compromised of Chris Goss (Masters of Reality) and Jeordie White (Marilyin Manson,The Desert Sessions,Nine Inch Nails)...they recorded two LPs,i thought of posting the second one:Licker's Last Leg.It's a good album even though it has the industrial label,it keeps the desert rock essence that made the Masters of Reality what they are today.

The 5:15ers are a project started by Josh Homme and Chris Goss.They haven't released anything solid,they just played a few shows,covering some songs from Era Vulgaris,Mark Lannegan albums and Masters of Reality.Some of these shows have been floating around the internet.I got my hands on one of them...so here it is.

7/3/08

I told you not to damage it...




Prong - Cleansing(1994),Power Of The Damager(2007)

Prong's first album,Cleansing,released way back in 1994 was an instant industrial metal clasic,i mean common how only "Snap Your Fingers,Snap Your Neck" could have made this album special,those powerful riffs rock your socks off , even though they are a little bit repetitive the music is filled with adrenaline.The second album i've posted ,Power Of The Damager,is their latest release and it's good even though a comparison with Cleansing is hard to make because they are now more groove metal than industrial metal.Enough talk,check these two albums out or die !

"ome albums, no matter how hard you try, can't be given any descriptive tags. You can't add a "nu-" or a "proto-" or a "post-" or a "pop-", there are no experiments or genre-shifting - it's just a solid example of a particular type of music at its core. Cleansing, the fifth full-length by the New York semi-supergroup (featuring Swans and Killing Joke members), is an excellent metal album that's nothing but.

Prong aren't trying to impress anybody with Cleansing - not that they aren't technically competent (they certainly are), but the band prefers to stick to more simple (and impressive) thrashing throughout the album, rather than toss off a few experimental filler tracks or attempt to go beyond the boundaries of what metal usually allows. This could lead to a repetitive and tedious album in the wrong hands, but Victor is a talented songwriter and covers as much territory within the confines of "metal" as he possibly can. He throws in some interesting twists now and then - like managing to use the familiar monotone "this is only a test" recording as a semi-melodic hook in "Test" - but nothing that'll cause anyone to hit the 'skip' button.

It's not a perfect album; the songs tend to drag on when there's nothing left to say, and Victor's lyrics aren't always brilliant. However, although it's hard to discern a definite meaning from his words, he's always (vaguely) trying to get some sort of message across. There's no songs about girls 'n' beer on here.

To sum it all up, if you like metal, get this album. There really isn't much more you can say. The musicians are impressive, the songs are all solid and unique enough to keep them from running together, and you'll either love it or hate it, because it's all the same style (powerful riffs; growled, thrash-style vocals; mid-to-fast tempo). Definitely a 4/5, because it impressed my non-metal-loving self and it'd be hard to find a better example of the genre during the time period it was released."(review from sputnikmusic.com)

For people who do cock-pushups...



V.A.-Do Not Freeze Your Dope

This is a comp i made for the guys at the sludgeswamp,hope you enjoy it...and cheeto i'm gonna go with my corn in the bowl cover,even though a a picture of a nubile blonde clutching two big planters of killer weed is more preferable.

1.Tenacious D - Cock Pushups
2.Gozu - Northside
3.Blake - 12 Steps To Hell
4.Boris - Ano Onna No Onryou (I can never remember this name,so if it's wrong..)
5.Brant Bjork - Automatic Fantastic
6.Dwarves - Fefu
7.Torche - Mentor
8.Spirit Caravan - Dreamwheel
9.Turbonegro - High On The Crime
10.Mustach - Mareld

R.I.P. Dimebag Darell




Pantera - Official Live: 101 Proof

This is Pantera's only official live album,the quality is excelent and the tracklist is great.Too bad they split up..and worse,one of the greatest guitarists in the world passed away...

"Few thrash-metal bands provoke a crowd into frothing fits of rage as effectively as Pantera. The group's first live album, Official Live: 101 Proof, captures the sonic assault that sparks such hysteria. Militaristic beats, jagged riffs and tortured guitar squalls are intertwined with Phil Anselmo's rabid-drill-sergeant vocals, which can build from a staccato bark to an elongated roar. Song tempos alternate between a goose-step march ("Walk," "Becoming") and a full-tilt spring ("Strength Beyond Strength," "Fucking Hostile"), and even the slowest tracks broil with tightfisted fury. Throughout Official Live, Pantera's followers roar with approval as their messiah spews bits of betweensong wisdom like, "May you get high, may you drop acid, may you get laid and all that good shit!" For those who survive the 14 live tracks, the band draws fresh blood on Official Live: 101 Proof with two new studio cuts. Drink up!"(review from rollingstone.com)

7/2/08

I'll never go to Lake Bodom



Children of Bodom - Are You Dead Yet (2005)

This is not my favourite CoB album but it is still a good one,Laiho does as usual a good job with this one....

"never expected Children of Bodom to make an album like this. I doubt anyone did. It's been surrounded by one hell of a dispute, with opinions ranging from complete garbage to the coming of a new genre. I'm not here to assert my own authority or provide a final say on anything; only my opinion.

This is, like the rest of Children of Bodom's discography, an incredible album. Their first three were the pinnacle of the extreme Finnish power metal sound, fused with neoclassical elements and the meanest shredding this side of Asgard. Hate Crew Deathroll was the birth of a brand new sound - extreme brutal power metal, with the lead guitar, melodies, and keyboards coming through stronger than ever, only backed by a violent assault of riffs. Are You Dead Yet? is an expansion of that sound, delving even deeper into the land of the riff, never abandoning Alexi Laiho's affinity for melodic lead guitar.

It's this volatile mix of melody and brutality that makes Are You Dead Yet? such a worthwhile album. Trashed, Lost & Strungout was an amazing preemptive view of this new sound, featuring lightning-fast drums and blindingly technical guitar and keyboard work as usual. However, the entire album certainly breaks out of a one-track formula, bring forth a new sound for each individual song. The first single, In Your Face, is more of an anthem than a musical masterpiece. It seems to summarize what CoB is all about, making heavy, in-your-face metal. That's exactly what this track is, laden with bare-bones riffs, headbanging grooves, and powerful keyboard backing.

The songs Are You Dead Yet? and Living Dead Beat follow the led of the EP song Knuckleduster, providing more heavy ass riffs with a defined keyboard atmosphere topped with some solos that will surely turn heads. Other tracks like We're Not Gonna Fall and Bastards of Bodom are throwbacks to their Hatebreeder-era power metal days, with the dominant lead guitar driving the song and catchy melodies throughout. Others still fall between all of the extremes listed above, with Next In Line and Punch Me I Bleed providing an artful balance.

The latest Children of Bodom album is, in the longrun, a very creative album. No band has ever played a thrash/power fusion quite like this before. While fans of their older work may be caught off guard, open-minded metal fans in general should find this an enjoyable, unique romp in the valleys of weak-slaying riffs and Yngwie-slaughtering solos. CoB really did it again with this one, as, while different, an entirely worthwhile album full of excellent metal."(review from metal-arhives.com)

Back to the roots of rock...blues (actually blues-rock)




The Black Keys - Thickfreakness,Rubber Factory

This is pure blues-rock,raw and unpolished,The White Stripes would kill someone just to sound like them.This is a doublepack consisting of their second and third albums.

"How much otherworldly noise can two guys make? Patrick Carney and Dan Auerbach -- better known as the gutterstomp blues duo the Black Keys -- have the answer to this (not quite) Zen riddle: plenty. Armed only with Carney's drum kit and Auerbach's fuzzed-out guitar and scratchy howl of a voice, the Black Keys have turned in a baker's dozen of sludgy (in a good way), funky, primordial blues numbers with their third album, Rubber Factory.

So, yes, Rubber Factory was actually recorded in a rubber factory in the boys' neighborhood in Akron, Ohio. And while the obvious remark to make here is to compare Auerbach's guttural vocals to slow-moving molten rubber, it's equally apropos to note how the run-down factory-cum-studio informs the Black Keys' songs. Sonically, the album just sounds enormous: opener "When the Lights Go Out" lumbers like Godzilla somehow took a wrong turn and ended up in the Mississippi Delta, while the album's first single, "10 A.M. Automatic" could fill an empty airplane hangar.

Their sound is no more polished than the tracks were on their last album, the also-great thickfreakness, but there's an air of stronger confidence on Rubber Factory. For all of their scruffy, lo-fi, DIY-aesthetic rocking, Carney and Auerbach sound arena-ready. Auerbach calls to ear fellow white-boy blues singers like Kenny Wayne Shepherd's vocalist Noah Hunt and Bad Company's Paul Rodgers on tunes like "10 A.M. Automatic" and "All Hands Against His Own", respectively. If you hadn't realized it already, Rubber Factory clearly outlines the fact that Texas blues (Shepherd), British blues (Bad Company) and gutterblues (the Black Keys) all draw from the same blues well.

But back to the factory's influence. Stomps like "The Desperate Man", "Airplane Blues" and even the haunting steel pedal ballad "The Lengths", bespeak a weight of the world that must have fallen on those who once worked in the factory. Credit Auerbach for evolving into one of the genre's finest lyricists. He doesn't try anything fancy (think Jack White singing about acetaminophen), but he knows the value of following the formulae of his predecessors. You'd be forgiven for thinking that lyrics such as "The girl is on my mind / I try to ignore, try to unwind / But she is on my mind" (from, uh, "The Girl is On My Mind") were written 80 years ago. Hell, just because he can, Auerbach tosses in an old-school murder ballad ("Stack Shot Billy"). Given the age-old feel of Auerbach's compositions, it's no surprise then, that Rubber Factory's two cover, "Grown So Ugly" and the Kinks' "Act Nice and Gentle" fit right in with the rest of the album. On the former, Auerbach coaxes a primal howl out of his guitar as he recounts running into an old flame who doesn't recognize him because of the titular affliction. (If that's not a bluesworthy lament, I don't know what is.) And the boys clean up their act on the Kinks cover, turning in a loping, warm, alt-countryish tune. (Add the Black Keys to the growing list of garage/blues-centric artists who recognize the influence of Ray Davies [see also Holly Golightly].)

Critical praise has been showered on Rubber Factory and deservedly so. Auerbach and Carney are smart musicians who understand and love the blues to the point where they've internalized it and made it something all their own while still honoring their forebears. And if that's too heavy a reason for you, take heart in the fact that Rubber Factory is a fun album: After all, one sings the blues to chase the blues away."(review from popmatters.com)

One of my favorite bands right now





Baroness - First,Second,A grey sigh in a flower husk (split with Unpersons)


Baroness is a great progressive sludge band,so if you like Mastodon and Isis you'll definetly like Baroness.In the archive i have included the First and Second EP and the Unpersons split.I'm also going to post The Red Album and the video for Wanderlust...but until then check this out,i'm sure you're gonna love it.

"When the first time I listened to this EP I was blown away. Baroness does not play a specific type of metal such as death or thrash, but instead seems to just be metal. I can�t really find a label for them on this EP, although I guess Sludge is the most appropriate for the purpose of this review. While only 17 minutes long, this CD is one of the most enjoyable I have in my collection and I will sometimes find myself listening to it 2 or 3 times in a row. Just because these guys don�t have a full length CD out does not mean that they should be taken lightly. Baroness is for real.

The first song, Tower Falls, is probably the best song that Baroness has ever written. The song starts off with a neat little intro which is followed by some cheesy nu-metal riffs but at about the 50 second mark things definitely start to pick up. While 7 minutes in length, this song never gets old or repetitive. The song has so much going on in it that you really have to hear it to understand just how good it is.

Coeur, the second song on this EP, is definitely a letdown after Tower Falls but is still a decent song. It�s loud and full of energy like all the songs that Baroness has but other than that it is just average. It�s a short song though (only a little over 3 minutes) and things definitely pick up with Rise.

Rise is the final song and is definitely one of Baroness� better songs. The song starts off with some beautiful guitar work for the first 2 minutes or so before the vocals kick in. The rest of the song is your average Baroness but those first 2 minutes make this song one of the best that Baroness has.

This score would probably be higher if Coeur had a little more going on in it but this is still a solid effort by Baroness. Really, if you like metal than you will probably like this CD because it offers something to everyone. Even if Coeur isn�t that great of a song, I would gladly pay the 8 dollars to get this EP just for Tower Falls so please don�t pass this up, you�ll just regret it later if you do."(review from http://www.metal-archives.com)

Hit me baby one more fucking time...



Britney Spears Metal Covers

If you need a good laugh than this stuff is for you..it features some great bands like Type-O-Negative and Children of Bodom covering some of Britney's crap.

God had a Lamb once....



Lamb of God - New American Gospel (2000)

I think this is Lamb of God's second best album (the first place goes to Ashes of The Wake),so it's worth the download.

"Describing themselves at pure American metal and signed to Metal Blade Records, Lamb of God (formally Burn the Priest), came up with this ten song debut release.Is it any good? In one word yes. In two words, hell yes.

The band's sound is difficult to explain. It might be the production value on this one but, a lot of the album is drum oriented and they are out in the forefront. This isn't really a problem if you like double bass, really high symbol hits, and different snare and tom sounds. However, the drums were recorded tough, and I mean tough. A bass hit
almost sounds like a regular snare hit, and if you're listening to this album too loud, those symbol hits are pure hell as they are driven straight into your ear with no filtration. The guitars are very good and really produce a hard hitting heavy sound even though they are only tuned in drop-D. For the people who don't know notes, listen to this album, and listen to Tool - Ænima and you're listening to the same tuning. Few can bring a hard hitting path of destruction in drop-D anymore. Bass is also heard in the album which is a rarity these days. The singer (screamer) is a little different. He is loud and higher pitched for having the typical death metal style. However, either due to the production value or my patience level, I can't understand a damn thing he is saying. However, if that doesn't matter to you (since it doesn't bother me), the music that they are playing is very good. It surprises me that this is their first major release. They sound like they have been playing for decades with the tightness of their sound. There's a lot of tempo and musical changes here to help keep the album interesting. Even though it's about 40 minutes long."(review from kickedintheface.com)

7/1/08

Hey,this sounds like Pantera !



Stonedirt - Redneck Blues

This band really sounds like Pantera,especially on the vocal side also having a stoner influence.

(The following bio is from their MySpace):

"Before Stonedirt there was the band called Riuros for over two years. Apart from three members now forming Stonedirt (Balázs, Szilárd and Boldizsár) there was Eniko Tóth (vocalist) and Péter Ertl (guitar). After two demos (Riding The Waves - 2003, After The Storm - 2004) and a lot of concerts it slowly turned out that some of the guys wanted to play something REALLY different. That's why everything changed and soon Eniko and Péter left Riuros. After a period of trying to find a new way, a new name, and most of all a new voice, Endre Tarjányi (also vocalist of Manikin Faint) joined... and Stonedirt was born - with influences like Pantera, Down, Black Sabbath and Black Label Society. Compared to the former band it is much harder and heavier and with a kind of southern stoner taste. Our first demo (JOYGRIND) recorded in september 2005. We recorded three song in 2006. december.(Bonus Thrash, for promotional use) We recorded our first album and made our first video-clip in 2007. The album called: Redneck Blues."(ironically i took this from the sludgeswamp

New Age punk...



Refused - The Shape Of Punk To Come

Great album this is a musthave for all punk fans... this is how modern punk should sound.

"The Shape… is an album that absolutely must be listened to as one whole piece of work. The individual songs have very little initial value when separated from the body of work that is the album. Each song flows into one another through a masterfully produced string of effects. These effects range from crazy techno beats, clips from radio shows, live recordings of the band itself, and just playing around with a synthesizer.

When it comes down to it, the production of this album takes it to a whole new level. The mix is different from song to song, each song’s mix fitting it’s mood. The mix’s often vary throughout the song itself changing the texture of the sound as the sections of the song are released. A great example of this is “Liberation Frequency” which starts off as a distant, dry sound that explodes with color during the chorus. It’s one of a thousand examples of excellence in production throughout this album.

Which brings me to the next point… the music itself. From the odd beats, to the overpowering guitar chords, this album is full of amazing musicianship. Varying meters and keys keep the listeners on their toes while the harsh vocals mixed with calm talking mend it together to form a perfect harmony of clashing that just works.

I’m not sure I can explain how amazing this album is… needless to say, it is and forever will be one of the most amazing albums in my collection."(review from warspire.com)

Heavy as a fat guy...



Electric Wizard - Witchcult Today (2007)

If you haven't heard of Electric Wizard,you aren't a true metalhead...just listen to this album and you'll know what i'm talking about.

"Electric Wizard is a hallowed name in the stoner/doom underworld, producing two of the genre's true classics in Come My Fanatics... and Dopethrone, along with a handful of essential albums and EPs. Currently, vocalist/guitarist Justin Oborn is the lone founding member of the band, which now also consists of guitarist Liz Buckingham, bassist Rob Al-Issa, and drummer Shaun Ritter, who manages to capture some of the earlier Wizard feel here on his first release behind the kit. Witchcult Today was recorded in Toe Rag Studios � famed for their analogue recordings and an ever-growing collection of vintage equipment � and produced by owner Liam Watson (the engineer and mixer on the White Stripes' smash hit Elephant, from the same studio) in order to achieve an authentic throwback sound. The result is the aural equivalent of a Hammer Horror flick from the '60s and early '70s, chock-full of arcane imagery and preternatural riffs, with Oborn's banshee wail low in the mix as usual. The production creates a lush, warm analog masterpiece without any modern equipment or computers used, as the evils of ProTools are replaced with those of weed, the occult, and devil music.

The title track kicks off Witchcult Today in classic Wizard s t y l e, with a riff that sounds like it could have come from the self-titled album or Come My Fanatics..., only it is accentuated here by the second guitar. The song has a slowed-down drugged-out Mercyful Fate vibe, minus King Diamond's falsetto, as Jus' vocals are particularly anguished and the lyrics depict a goat-headed demon materializing from a cloud of pot smoke during a Satanic ritual. If that doesn't draw you in, there's the devilishly catchy riff of "Dunwich," a more uptempo rocker based on H.P. Lovecraft's The Dunwich Horror, with a groove that has a tendency to stick in one's memory long after the record is over. "Satanic Rites of Drugula" is a stoner adaptation of Hammer Films' The Satanic Rites of Dracula and may border on self-parody, but the concept (a vampire count resurrected by dopesmoke who drugs his victims before drinking their blood in order to get high) would certainly make an interesting movie in its own right. The crunching doom riff and the Sabbathy tone of the leads and solos back up Oborn's improved vocal abilities, giving the over-the-top lyrics the credibility they need.

The short instrumental "Raptus" � Latin for "rapture" � features the sitar and leads into "The Chosen Few," a tale of stoned Satanic slaves set to a heavy midtempo riff, with a Hammond organ late in the song and some lyrics ("The time has come/All the chosen, time to put down your bongs/Take up a knife, end a life/Legalize drugs and murder") that show the hatred still flickering in the resin-coated heart of the Electric Wizard. Although not as immediate as "Dunwich," "Torquemada 71" and its sing-along chorus provide the other memorable hit of the album, as the newly-paired rhythm section swings along and Oborn shines vocally again. He actually sounds better than ever throughout Witchcult Today, as he's singing relatively cleanly with an Ozzyish tone to his voice. "Torquemada 71" is inspired by Tom�s de Torquemada, who was the first Inquisitor General of Spain and the sadist responsible for the torture of countless heretics during the Spanish Inquisition, but the Countess Elizabeth Bathory is also mentioned in the song as his "necroqueen," even though he died 62 years before she was even born. They'd make a cute couple though. The riff and guitar work is stunning as Liz and Jus complement one another to provide a fuller sound.

"Black Magic Rituals & Perversions" is the oddball track here, a welcome return to the tripped-out sounds of "Doom Mantia," "Ivixor B/Phase Inducer," and "Mountains of Mars" from the past, with its otherworldly atmosphere and indecipherable chanting oppressed by a massive riff for the first half. The second half of the song gets spacey and psychedelic until it ends abruptly at exactly eleven minutes. This song had originally been announced as being 20+ minutes and I would definitely love to hear an uncut version, but I've heard that they had to cut it because playing the full track would have opened the Gates of Hell and summoned forth a legion of demons. True story, that's just how evil it is. The final track is the epic "Saturnine," and it suffers the same fate at just a shade over eleven minutes, as the hypnotic riff is suddenly cut off and leaves the listener wanting more. The stripped-down retro production by Liam Watson may not impress followers of the Wizard who consider the loud and angry Dopethrone to be the band's pinnacle, but those who prefer the earlier material should find Witchcult Today to be "mind-melting occult rock" and perhaps the band's finest offering yet." (review from stonerrock.com)

Supergroups are so popular these days....



Down - Over and Under

Phil Anselmo & Co. are back with the third installment of Down...one of my favorite albums lately.

"First off, let it be known that the first Down release, “NOLA,” is in this reviewer’s heavy rotation, even twelve years after its release. You just don’t find clean metal with that kind of flavor these days. However, with New Orleans, LA serving as Down’s hometown, along with the tragic circumstances that have befallen vocalist Phil Anselmo’s personal life, you can bet that flavor, passion, and a spewing of emotion are here in spades in Down’s first release post-Katrina and post-Dimebag tragedy.

Letting the numerous articles covering Anselmo’s personal life speak for themselves, and assuming the raw emotion that New Orleaners bring to their respective arts post-Katrina, a strictly musical review of “Over the Under” can be summed up in one word: “pure.” The new album marks a return to Down’s initial sound, which has ex-Pantera vocalist Anselmo lending his singing voice much more than his scream/growl hybrid that he became famous for. And for those of you who don’t know, Anselmo can sing. Moreover, Down’s guitars just have that Southern feel to them, and Down doesn’t fit the contemporary metal scene all that well, which in this case is refreshing. It’s a little bit of old-school Southern rock, but much heavier. It’s a little bit of stoner-rock, but with more lyrical artistry.

As far as the track list goes, of the three Down releases, this set is the most complete. There might not be as many headbanging songs here as there were in “NOLA” (“Temptation’s Wings,” “Losing All,” “Lifer,” and “Rehab” were great in that department), but each song is put together extremely well, with underrated instrumentation, including meaty guitar riffs, and well-produced vocal tracks. The tempo of the album is decidedly mid-paced—more up-tempo than Down’s second album, “A Bustle in your Hedgerow,” but slower than parts of “NOLA.” Each listener can no doubt find their own favorites on this well-balanced album, but remarkable tracks include “On March the Saints,” which has the most furious guitars on the album, and “In the Thrall of it All,” a momentous slower-paced track with a wicked guitar solo.

Put simply, if you’re more of a fan of Down’s first release, “NOLA,” you’ll likely enjoy “Over the Under” much more than “A Bustle in your Hedgerow.” Down’s “NOLA” is legendary and packs some truly great tracks, and while “Over the Under” doesn’t quite achieve that “masterpiece” status, it does provide a great listen that will still be a great listen in ten years."(review from metalunderground.com)

Matt Pike is a fucking legend....



High on Fire - Death is This Communion

High on Fire.Words can't describe HoF,let's just say it was 2007's best metal album !