Coheed And Cambria-Year Of The Black Rainbow-(DE)-2010-SiREseeders: 1
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Coheed And Cambria-Year Of The Black Rainbow-(DE)-2010-SiRE (Size: 94.17 MB)
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Artist: Coheed And Cambria
Title: Year Of The Black Rainbow Label: Columbia Genre: Progressive Rock Bitrate: 209kbit av. Time: 01:02:25 Size: 98.18 mb Rip Date: 2010-04-08 Str Date: 2010-04-13 01. One 1:54 02. The Broken 3:53 03. Guns Of Summer 4:47 04. Here We Are Juggernaut 3:44 05. Far 4:53 06. This Shattered Symphony 4:25 07. World Of Lines 3:17 08. Made Out Of Nothing (All That I Am) 4:39 09. Pearl Of The Stars 5:04 10. In The Flame Of Error 5:27 11. When Skeletons Live 4:17 12. The Black Rainbow 7:35 13. Chamberlain (Demo) (Bonus Track) 4:21 14. The Lost Shepherd (Demo) (Bonus Track) 4:09 Release Notes: So, in the process of writing this review, I wrote at least 4 different introductory paragraphs TRYING to come up with something epic enough to represent how incredibly badass Year of the Black Rainbow is, but the best I came up with was an image of Claudio Sanchez holding up a machine gun guitar and blasting apart Nazis that may have been zombies. Seeing as how I am not a skilled enough artist/photoshopper to actually put this mind-blowing picture together, this could very well be totally worthless. However, all is not lost: just imagine that picture in your head, and youÆll find a pretty good place to rest your thoughts as to how Year of the Black Rainbow sounds. In all honesty, you can also find a pretty easy sketch of the album by thinking back to his solo project, The Prize Fighter Inferno. A lot will be made of the albumÆs more electronic/industrial sound being caused by Chris PennieÆs input, but a lot of the sounds can be traced back pretty definitively to that side projects sound. In A+ B = C terms, itÆs In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 plus My BrotherÆs Blood Machine. For fans of the hair-metal of No World For Tomorrow and who were expecting even more bombastic arena-filling riffs and choruses, this may come as a slight disappointment. To older fans of Coheedàwell, at least there isnÆt a song like ôJustice in Murderö here. The shift to a more pop-industrial sound is probably going to be just as controversial as either of the Good ApolloÆs shifts in sound. For fans who just love Coheed or newcomers though, it really isnÆt any sort of deal. The album kicks off with the duo of ôThe Brokenö and ôGuns of Summerö which in their own ways display the new sides to the band. ôThe Brokenö features the penchant Coheed still has for writing epic, off kilter metal songs. The transition from the groove-metal verse to the almost post rock atmosphere of the chorus is sublime, and the weird ôblah blah blahö after the chorus add some flair to the whole affair. Meanwhile, ôGuns of Summerö is easily the craziest sounding song theyÆve ever written, and a point where you could absolutely say Chris Pennie definitely helped out in a big way. The song constantly shifts between mathy-rock and soaring choruses, but it never sounds forced, something Coheed have had problems with in the past. And thatÆs how much of the album progresses. ôFarö is a dreamy electronic ballad that conquers its cheesiness by sublimely changing its tones, even if its goes on a bit too long still. ôThis Shattered Symphony/World of Linesö bring back some of that NWFT sound, but without all the stupid guitar solos and voice modulation. ôThe Black Rainbowö is an incredibly odd closer, eschewing the previous standards set for Coheed epics and simply progressing through a macabre, melodic first couples minutes till the concluding wails of ôitÆs over, itÆs all fallen apartàö, never exploding into some great climax but instead transitioning perfectly into what would be the next chapter in the ÆstoryÆ of Coheed & Cambria. ThereÆs a lot of goodness to be found here (with only a brief mention, ôHere We Are Juggernautös chorus could be one of the defining moments of the bands career), and thatÆs good considering that itÆs biggest weakness is it doesnÆt really feel like an evolution. The sound is different, but it doesnÆt deviate from the formula that Coheed have established. ItÆs mostly all the same pieces from the bands previous records put into a different context. While itÆs sort of a fresh take on their musical canon, it could afford with more new songwriting techniques and maybe less vocal effects. Still, Year of the Black Rainbow is a consistently great album that may have required just a bit more panache, and certainly lives up to its predecessors. Deluxe edition including 2 previously unreleased bonus tracks. Enjoy! sire@hush.ai Related Torrents
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