Saturday, August 23, 2008

THEM SLIPKNOT NIGGAS ARE AT IT AGAIN!!




Slipknot - All Hope Is Gone [V0]






01. .execute.
02. Gematria (The Killing Name)
03. Sulfur
04. Psychosocial
05. Dead Memories
06. Vendetta
07. Butcher's Hook
08. Gehenna
09. This Cold Black
10. Wherein Lies Continue
11. Snuff
12. All Hope Is Gone
13. Child of Burning Time (Bonus Track)
14. Vermilion Pt. 2 (Bloodstone Mix) (Bonus Track)
15. Til We Die (Bonus Track)


ITS NOT Hip-Hop!!! But guess what.... I posted it anyway. Dont like it, dont fucking download it. Dont waste your energy on crying about it because i give a fuck... Enjoy to those of you that i KNOW still like some musical variety in your lives.

I liked the CD. Its not their best work. Has a few radio tracks on it. I would really say they found a happy medium between Slipknot and Stone Sour (those that have any musical knowledge). Dont expect a thrash CD at all. Be ready for the ups and downs. Done really well, like an old Pantera CD (RIP D.B.D)!!!

Album Review (not from HHB):

Far distant screeching of guitars and vocal cords begin the album. Execute's noise creeping closer, building intensity, gaining pace and growing volume until exploding onto the 2nd track Gematria (The Killing Name). Gematria is a politically charged anthem, crammed with quotes from speeches and thought provoking questions. Asking "America... What if God doesn't care?"
The relentlessness of the opening is calmed by Sulfur, which wouldn't go wrong on a Stone Sour album. The fade out of slow Sulfur is met with the speed of the typically Slipknot sounding Psychosocial. I have no doubt Psychosocial will join the likes of Wait & Bleed, Duality and Before I Forget as Slipknot songs which have broken into the mainstream without losing the hard edge which makes Slipknot. It's complexity is it's simplicity.
The influence of Metallica's Enter Sandman is very evident in Dead Memories, having both a similar riff and song structure. In the second half, though, the masked veteran's trademark guitar onslaught appears. Alan Moore's V would love the surprising upbeat nature of Vendetta, asking questions like "Are You Ready for the Time of Your Life?" Managing to highlight the main theme of the album; "Slipknot Are Back and Better Than Ever." The band have not needed to change anything and somehow still sound fresh.
The album continues with Butcher's Hook, incredibly allowing all nine members a chance to have the limelight which with it's catchy chorus confirms this song as the best in the album thus far. Following the likes of Butcher's Hook with speed could only be done in a DragonForce album, so Slipknot take the chance to slow the pace with the experimental Gehenna.
"TRY TO STOP ME IF YOU CAN!" screams lead singer Corey Taylor in This Cold Black. The song is arguably the strongest on the album, containing a top notch guitar solo, athemic lyrics and a drum track which begs the question: How many drum kits does Joey Jordison go through? If his drum kit hasn't broken, then after Wherein Lies Continue it's going to be in pieces. Although the constant smashing of the drums are relaxed in Vermilion sound alike Snuff.
The album finishes with it's title track, All Hope is Gone. First released in June, the song promised fans this album would be even more noise that sounds like Slipknot. The song is so typically Slipknot that you could guess the band within the first note of the song. Which, in this case, is a good thing as the song is perfect. It sums up Slipknot's work and leaves you yearning for more.
Fans and critics alike had waited 4 years for Slipknot to produce new material, but the wait was worth it. The album is getting rave reviews from the mainstream to the underground and from the void in between, us included. If we have to wait another 4 years for more material we are sure it will be worth it.
Slipknot - All Hope Is Gone: 5/5 - Takes the heaviness of Iowa and melody of The Subliminal Verses and mashes it together.




No comments: