Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Torche

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,290
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2007年08月15日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルRobotic Empire Records
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 ROBO060
SKU 655035706023

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:31:35
Torche came into existence as an underground supergroup composed of vocalist/guitarist Steve Brooks (of stoner rockers Floor), lead guitarist Juan Montoya (also of Floor, plus sludgecore icons Cavity), bassist Jon Nunez (of grindcore merchants Shitstorm), and drummer Rick Smith (of every other band you can imagine), so their pedigree and experience were never in question so much as what in blazes their eponymous 2005 debut album would actually sound like. This, as it turned out, was an amalgam of sound, aptly dubbed "thunder-pop" by the group, whose prior lives in all of those " -- core" bands certainly informed the brevity of their songs (most of which lasted but one- or two-and-a-half minutes), but otherwise yielded ample evidence of stoner rock, doom, post-grunge, post-metal, and, yes, power pop! The last of these genres was most prevalent in turbulently melodic offerings like "Mentor," "Erase," and "Vampyro," while other, coarser grinds such as "Charge of the Brown Recluse" and "Holy Roar" paid tribute to the primal sludge of Cavity, EyeHateGod, and the Melvins. Somewhere in between, multifaceted fare like "F**k Addict," "Rockit," and "Make Me Alive" revealed Soundgarden to be a major influence on Torche's light/dark sensibilities; and in the nine-minute behemoth, "The Last Word," the quartet's journey from ethereal atmospherics to psychedelic sludge, and back again, made the song sound like Deep Purple's "Child in Time" for the post-rock new millennium (results may vary depending on drug use). All in all, Torche's debut plays out like a musical asteroid field, where chaotic and even seemingly haphazard collisions between foreign sonic objects yields frequently unpredictable and startlingly original new hybrids. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Charge Of The Brown Recluse

      アーティスト: Torche

    2. 2.
      Safe

      アーティスト: Torche

    3. 3.
      Mentor

      アーティスト: Torche

    4. 4.
      Erase

      アーティスト: Torche

    5. 5.
      Fuck Addict (Lyric-less Version)

      アーティスト: Torche

    6. 6.
      Vampyro

      アーティスト: Torche

    7. 7.
      Rockit

      アーティスト: Torche

    8. 8.
      Fire

      アーティスト: Torche

    9. 9.
      Holy Roar

      アーティスト: Torche

    10. 10.
      The Last Word

      アーティスト: Torche

    11. 11.
      Make Me Alive (Lyric-less/Bonus Track)

      アーティスト: Torche

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Torche

商品の紹介

Spin - "Torche set their guitars on 'dirge,' work their vocal harmonies, and say amen to Foo Fighters riff-o-matic preaching." Kerrang - "If you're looking for something crushingly heavy but with some proper singing then this superbly promising debut is the one for you."
Rovi

Torche came into existence as an underground supergroup composed of vocalist/guitarist Steve Brooks (of stoner rockers Floor), lead guitarist Juan Montoya (also of Floor, plus sludgecore icons Cavity), bassist Jon Nunez (of grindcore merchants Shitstorm), and drummer Rick Smith (of every other band you can imagine), so their pedigree and experience were never in question so much as what in blazes their eponymous 2005 debut album would actually sound like. This, as it turned out, was an amalgam of sound, aptly dubbed "thunder-pop" by the group, whose prior lives in all of those " -- core" bands certainly informed the brevity of their songs (most of which lasted but one- or two-and-a-half minutes), but otherwise yielded ample evidence of stoner rock, doom, post-grunge, post-metal, and, yes, power pop! The last of these genres was most prevalent in turbulently melodic offerings like "Mentor," "Erase," and "Vampyro," while other, coarser grinds such as "Charge of the Brown Recluse" and "Holy Roar" paid tribute to the primal sludge of Cavity, EyeHateGod, and the Melvins. Somewhere in between, multifaceted fare like "F**k Addict," "Rockit," and "Make Me Alive" revealed Soundgarden to be a major influence on Torche's light/dark sensibilities; and in the nine-minute behemoth, "The Last Word," the quartet's journey from ethereal atmospherics to psychedelic sludge, and back again, made the song sound like Deep Purple's "Child in Time" for the post-rock new millennium (results may vary depending on drug use). All in all, Torche's debut plays out like a musical asteroid field, where chaotic and even seemingly haphazard collisions between foreign sonic objects yields frequently unpredictable and startlingly original new hybrids. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia|
Rovi

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