Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

No Time To Bleed : Tour Edition [CD+DVD]

5.0

販売価格

¥
2,690
税込
還元ポイント

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2010年11月上旬
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルCentury Media Records
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 9980462
SKU 5051099804623

構成数 : 2枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Thanks to a strong first album for Century Media (2007's The Cleansing) and to possessing one of the scene's most powerful and dynamic stage shows, California's Suicide Silence quickly managed to distance themselves somewhat from the teeming mass of deathcore bands that began crowding America's every rehearsal space, record store, and concert venue in the late '00s. Yes, detractors of the style as a whole still wondered what all the fuss was about, but the quintet's second full-length album, 2009's No Time to Bleed, may help to answer some of their questions with the corroborating evidence of an even better set of songs than their debut's. In a nutshell, the album proves that Suicide Silence are one of the only bands of their ilk to have cracked the admittedly limited, if contradiction-happy, deathcore template (which goes something like this: scream, growl, blast, doom, grind, grind, and grind some more) by incorporating foreign heavy metal objects, and -- here lies the key -- making them integral elements of each song, rather than forced displays of reckless eclecticism. Consequently, notable new offerings like "Lifted," "Wasted," and "Disengage" jump off the note-blackened music sheet via illuminating glimpses of thrash, doom, classic metal -- you name it; screaming pinch harmonics and fluid solos (see "Smoke," "Genocide"); and a surprisingly varied array of guitar riff textures, liable to impress the likes of Dimebag Darrell (RIP) or Tool's Adam Jones. Cap this off with an instinctive nose for songwriting economy (no overlabored epics for this band) and lyrics that, while simplistic and even repetitive, at times (e.g. "Wake Up" and the title track), are also both refreshingly direct and intelligible, for the most part, and you get a real sense of -- dare we say it -- accessibility?! Even the album's singular full-on departure from deathcore expectations, the horror music soundtrack that isn't, "...And Then She Bled," is handled with aplomb, where, for most other bands, it might have felt like a leftover indulgence, adapted from some bandmember's home demos. Deathcore neophytes may still require a few additional listens of No Time to Bleed before they'll be able to pick these nuances out of the ever prevailing din and hysteria, but they're in there, just waiting to be revealed, and hopefully becoming increasingly clear to longtime genre converts, looking to separate the wheat from the chaff. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Wake Up
    2. 2.
      Lifted
    3. 3.
      Smoke
    4. 4.
      Something Invisible
    5. 5.
      No Time To Bleed
    6. 6.
      Suffer
    7. 7.
      And Then She Bled
    8. 8.
      Wasted
    9. 9.
      Your Creations
    10. 10.
      Genocide
    11. 11.
      Disengage
    12. 12.
      Wake Up
    13. 13.
      Disengage
  2. 2.[DVD]
    1. 1.
      Lifted
    2. 2.
      Your Creations
    3. 3.
      Unanswered
    4. 4.
      Price of Beauty
    5. 5.
      Wake Up
    6. 6.
      No Pity For a Coward
    7. 7.
      Wake Up
    8. 8.
      Lifted
    9. 9.
      Wake Up
    10. 10.
      Genocide
    11. 11.
      Disengage

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Suicide Silence

オリジナル発売日:2009年06月30日

商品の紹介

Thanks to a strong first album for Century Media (2007's The Cleansing) and to possessing one of the scene's most powerful and dynamic stage shows, California's Suicide Silence quickly managed to distance themselves somewhat from the teeming mass of deathcore bands that began crowding America's every rehearsal space, record store, and concert venue in the late '00s. Yes, detractors of the style as a whole still wondered what all the fuss was about, but the quintet's second full-length album, 2009's No Time to Bleed, may help to answer some of their questions with the corroborating evidence of an even better set of songs than their debut's. In a nutshell, the album proves that Suicide Silence are one of the only bands of their ilk to have cracked the admittedly limited, if contradiction-happy, deathcore template (which goes something like this: scream, growl, blast, doom, grind, grind, and grind some more) by incorporating foreign heavy metal objects, and -- here lies the key -- making them integral elements of each song, rather than forced displays of reckless eclecticism. Consequently, notable new offerings like "Lifted," "Wasted," and "Disengage" jump off the note-blackened music sheet via illuminating glimpses of thrash, doom, classic metal -- you name it; screaming pinch harmonics and fluid solos (see "Smoke," "Genocide"); and a surprisingly varied array of guitar riff textures, liable to impress the likes of Dimebag Darrell (RIP) or Tool's Adam Jones. Cap this off with an instinctive nose for songwriting economy (no overlabored epics for this band) and lyrics that, while simplistic and even repetitive, at times (e.g. "Wake Up" and the title track), are also both refreshingly direct and intelligible, for the most part, and you get a real sense of -- dare we say it -- accessibility?! Even the album's singular full-on departure from deathcore expectations, the horror music soundtrack that isn't, "...And Then She Bled," is handled with aplomb, where, for most other bands, it might have felt like a leftover indulgence, adapted from some bandmember's home demos. Deathcore neophytes may still require a few additional listens of No Time to Bleed before they'll be able to pick these nuances out of the ever prevailing din and hysteria, but they're in there, just waiting to be revealed, and hopefully becoming increasingly clear to longtime genre converts, looking to separate the wheat from the chaff. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia|
Rovi

Thanks to a strong first album for Century Media (2007's The Cleansing) and to possessing one of the scene's most powerful and dynamic stage shows, California's Suicide Silence quickly managed to distance themselves somewhat from the teeming mass of deathcore bands that began crowding America's every rehearsal space, record store, and concert venue in the late '00s. Yes, detractors of the style as a whole still wondered what all the fuss was about, but the quintet's second full-length album, 2009's No Time to Bleed, may help to answer some of their questions with the corroborating evidence of an even better set of songs than their debut's. In a nutshell, the album proves that Suicide Silence are one of the only bands of their ilk to have cracked the admittedly limited, if contradiction-happy, deathcore template (which goes something like this: scream, growl, blast, doom, grind, grind, and grind some more) by incorporating foreign heavy metal objects, and -- here lies the key -- making them integral elements of each song, rather than forced displays of reckless eclecticism. Consequently, notable new offerings like "Lifted," "Wasted," and "Disengage" jump off the note-blackened music sheet via illuminating glimpses of thrash, doom, classic metal -- you name it; screaming pinch harmonics and fluid solos (see "Smoke," "Genocide"); and a surprisingly varied array of guitar riff textures, liable to impress the likes of Dimebag Darrell (RIP) or Tool's Adam Jones. Cap this off with an instinctive nose for songwriting economy (no overlabored epics for this band) and lyrics that, while simplistic and even repetitive, at times (e.g. "Wake Up" and the title track), are also both refreshingly direct and intelligible, for the most part, and you get a real sense of -- dare we say it -- accessibility?! Even the album's singular full-on departure from deathcore expectations, the horror music soundtrack that isn't, "...And Then She Bled," is handled with aplomb, where, for most other bands, it might have felt like a leftover indulgence, adapted from some bandmember's home demos. Deathcore neophytes may still require a few additional listens of No Time to Bleed before they'll be able to pick these nuances out of the ever prevailing din and hysteria, but they're in there, just waiting to be revealed, and hopefully becoming increasingly clear to longtime genre converts, looking to separate the wheat from the chaff. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Rovi

メンバーズレビュー

1件のレビューがあります
5.0
100%
0%
0%
0%
0%
星5確実な最高のアルバムです!
個人的にはWake up、Smokeがオススメです!
0

読み込み中にエラーが発生しました。

画面をリロードして、再読み込みしてください。