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Rock/Pop
CD
Sever The Wicked Hand : Special Edition<限定盤>
★★★★★
★★★★★
0.0

在庫状況 について

商品の情報

フォーマット

CD

構成数

1

国内/輸入

輸入

パッケージ仕様

-

発売日

2011年02月14日

規格品番

9980690

レーベル

SKU

5051099806900

作品の情報
メイン
アーティスト
オリジナル発売日
2011年
商品の紹介
Alternative Press - 4 stars out of 5 -- "On tracks like 'Protectors Of The Shrine,' Tommy Buckley is a double-bass monster, and it's nice to hear a drummer that sounds like a human thrashing a kit..."
Rovi
Given Kirk Windstein's busy schedule as a member of the highly successful Down and persistent reports about his struggles with alcohol abuse, the prospects of his original band, Crowbar, ever releasing another album looked relatively grim during the second half of the 2000s. But after finding a new record label (eOne Entertainment) and new management (with friend and Hatebreed frontman Jamey Jasta), and cleaning up his act, a sober Windstein was actually ready to attempt a comeback by the time 2010 rolled around. And before you knew it, Crowbar's ninth studio album, Sever the Wicked Hand, was arriving in stores on February 8, 2011 -- precisely six years to the day since the group's dispirited eighth effort, Lifesblood for the Downtrodden -- and one can earnestly say the wait was worth it. Not that anything has changed cosmetically speaking about Windstein's patented NOLA-style sludge; no great revelations or revolutions are in store here, but his spirit and inspiration have clearly been revitalized, and the end results amount to a quintessential Crowbar album. Whether showing unexpected bursts of speed (the title track, "The Cemetery Angels," etc.), slowing things down to a near standstill ("Liquid Sky and Cold Black Earth," "Symbiosis"), or marching to massive grooves somewhere in between ("Isolation [Desperation]," "As I Become One," etc.), Windstein's riffs are consistently twisted into gloriously misshapen form, just like in the days of old. They're also at their titanic, messianic best when interlaced with woeful melodies that give his tormented howls the poignancy needed to sustain his pleas for absolution on the stunning "Let Me Mourn" and "Echo an Eternity." All of which brings Crowbar and their rehabilitated leader back full circle, in a sense, to the place they started from -- philosophically speaking -- all of 20 years prior, with Sever the Wicked Hand one of the strongest efforts of their career. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia|
Rovi
収録内容

構成数 | 1枚

合計収録時間 | 00:00:00

Given Kirk Windstein's busy schedule as a member of the highly successful Down and persistent reports about his struggles with alcohol abuse, the prospects of his original band, Crowbar, ever releasing another album looked relatively grim during the second half of the 2000s. But after finding a new record label (eOne Entertainment) and new management (with friend and Hatebreed frontman Jamey Jasta), and cleaning up his act, a sober Windstein was actually ready to attempt a comeback by the time 2010 rolled around. And before you knew it, Crowbar's ninth studio album, Sever the Wicked Hand, was arriving in stores on February 8, 2011 -- precisely six years to the day since the group's dispirited eighth effort, Lifesblood for the Downtrodden -- and one can earnestly say the wait was worth it. Not that anything has changed cosmetically speaking about Windstein's patented NOLA-style sludge; no great revelations or revolutions are in store here, but his spirit and inspiration have clearly been revitalized, and the end results amount to a quintessential Crowbar album. Whether showing unexpected bursts of speed (the title track, "The Cemetery Angels," etc.), slowing things down to a near standstill ("Liquid Sky and Cold Black Earth," "Symbiosis"), or marching to massive grooves somewhere in between ("Isolation [Desperation]," "As I Become One," etc.), Windstein's riffs are consistently twisted into gloriously misshapen form, just like in the days of old. They're also at their titanic, messianic best when interlaced with woeful melodies that give his tormented howls the poignancy needed to sustain his pleas for absolution on the stunning "Let Me Mourn" and "Echo an Eternity." All of which brings Crowbar and their rehabilitated leader back full circle, in a sense, to the place they started from -- philosophically speaking -- all of 20 years prior, with Sever the Wicked Hand one of the strongest efforts of their career. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia

エディション | Special Edition

    • 1.
      [CD]
      • 1.
        Isolation (Desperation)
      • 2.
        Sever the Wicked Hand
      • 3.
        Liquid Sky and Cold Black Earth
      • 4.
        Let Me Mourn
      • 5.
        The Cemetery Angels
      • 6.
        As I Become One
      • 7.
        A Farwell to Misery
      • 8.
        Protector of the Shrine
      • 9.
        I Only Deal in Truth
      • 10.
        Echo an Eternity
      • 11.
        Cleanse Me Heal Me
      • 12.
        Symbiosis
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