| | Pantera Great Southern Trendkill CD Pantera Discography of CDs
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Pantera: Philip Anselmo (vocals); Dimebag Darrell (guitar, background vocals); Rex (bass, background vocals); Vinnie Paul (drums, background vocals). Additional personnel: Big Ross (keyboards); Seth Putnam (background vocals). Recorded at Chasin Jason Studios, Texas and Nothing Studios, New Orleans, Louisiana. "Suicide Note Pt. I" was nominated for a 1997 Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance. Pantera's fourth major-label album is as dementedly metallic as anything the band has done. Over the years, this band has built a massive following with its adroit combination of guitar virtuosity that rivals Metallica's and an attitude as dark as Nine Inch Nails'. Philip Anselmo's vocals for THE GREAT SOUTHERN TRENDKILL were recorded at Trent Reznor's Nothing Studios, and they are positively demonic. They perfectly complement Dimebag Darrell's thunderous and dexterous guitar work. Vinnie Paul's ferocious, double-kick drumming is the final garnish on Pantera's infernal sound. Pantera may be the definitive modern metal band. Personnel: Phil Anselmo (vocals); Diamond Darrell (guitar, background vocals); Big Ross (keyboards); Vinnie Paul (drums, background vocals); Rex Brown (background vocals). Audio Mixers: Terry Date; Vinnie Paul. Recording information: Chasin Jason Studios; Nothing Studios, New Orleans, LA. Photographers: Zig Leszczynski; Joe Giron. Thankfully, Pantera has stopped attempting to outdo each successive album in terms of start-to-finish intensity, but that doesn't mean they don't try in spots. The Great Southern Trendkill is burdened with passages in which Phil Anselmo's vocals cross the line into histrionics, making the band's trademark intensity sound dull, forced, and theatrical rather than sincere. The lyrics, which reached their apex with Vulgar Display of Power's focus on personal politics and integrity, have degenerated into half-baked rants against drugs and pop-culture media. But Trendkill is partially redeemed by trading Pantera's usual pound-then-pound-harder approach to albums for a greater variety of tempos and moods. Dimebag Darrell, while mostly sticking to his familiar riffing style, does coax some intriguing, unexpected sounds from his instrument. Ultimately, though, the ballads and slower tracks ("10's," "Suicide Note, Pt. 1," and "Floods") provide the album's most chilling, memorable moments, and rank with their best material. Longtime Pantera fans will find plenty to enjoy here, and the band's expanding range bodes well, but overall, Trendkill is an inconsistent outing. ~ Steve HueySpin (7/96, p.96) - "...mature speedmetal and perfect summer fun: twisted power ballads, rap-style toasting, almost radio-worthy melodies, plus all the right jackhammer drum jolts, wrestler bellows, and guitar lurch..." Melody Maker (5/25/96, p.49) - "...It makes my brain hurt, my eyes water and my genitalia retract like a startled turtle. I cannot think of higher recommendation, considering the kind of album it is. If it made me feel all warm and gooey or tearful and lovelorn, then it would be a pitiful failure by its own lights..." RIP (7/96, p.14) - 5 (out of 5) - "...This album is tight and well thought-out, and as a result it goes from strength to savage strength..." Great Southern Trendkill Music Pantera Great Southern Trendkill Songs Great Southern Trendkill Music Great Southern Trendkill Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews The Great Southern Trendkill Pantera's 2nd best album. If your looking for something heavy, it's here. If your looking for something dark and brutal, it's here. It also has Dimebag's best solo in Floods and Phil's best vocal work. Ignore Cowboy's From Hell at the moment and buy this album. Submitted by LeperMessiah7366637 (Erwin, TN, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
PANTERA RULES!!!!!! Hey listen up, Pantera rules and this cd proves it. It has the best vocals out of all their cd's, we're talkin serious yellin and screamin here. It rocks get this cd now. LATA, JUSTIN H. Submitted by a reviewer (meaux,LA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
It's good... It`s a good record but I really prefer others like Cowboys or Vulgar Display.
Submitted by acekisss (Caracas, VENEZUELA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
andrea77 i lissen this album for two years everynight... RESPECT FOREVER FOR THE BEST HARD-GROUP IN THE WORLD. and lissen all of sound in peace Submitted by cosmos (italy, europe) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
pantera's heaviest and darkest having bought this as the last pantera album to complete my pantera catalog i have to say that is my favorite one.i have made that conclusion being that i first started getting in to pantera by haveing a friend burn me his "best" of pantera cd.i loved listening to it everyday a song here and there but for me at age 16 having being born in 1989 and discoving this amazingly talented band i wanted more.then i have bought "cowboys from hell" and "reinventing the steel".having noticed that these were put out at their thrash breakthrough and last years there was still a few more albums to cover.i listened to these 2 for a long time.then i had picked up "vulgar display of power" and i loved that one it was just plain chaotic.then back in this past december i had bought "far beyond driven".i knew that alot of people had said that this (fbd) was very inconsistant album.that was once again the best album that ive heard until i bought this one."The Great Southern Trendkill" from the first track(the title one actally) until (reprise)sandblasted skin the album closer,is the best pantera ive heard.i would highly suggest this album to anyone who wants to start their pantera collection off right.if you ask me i would say that this album alone(having listened to every studio album throughly)has a great combination of all the diffrent heavy music styles that pantera had made into their own unique sound.as any pantera fan would tell you,they will say to your face that no other band past or present will ever sound like pantera.they may sound close but they will never have the entire pantera sound that made everyone who listed to them get up and go f*cking crazy.if not this then i would also suggest their "best of" collection that has other songs that were on movie soundtracks only and the package all so includes a dvd with all their great videos that had phil dime rex vinnie aka the pantera boys. Submitted by insane roberto (ma,usa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Buy Great Southern Trendkill CD Purchase Great Southern Trendkill CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Pantera Reinventing The Steel CD (2000)
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$8.99 The Misfits: Glenn Danzig (vocals); Doyle (guitar); Jerry Only (bass); Arthur Googy (drums). Recorded at Mix-O-Lydian, Boonton, New Jersey. The Misfits (U.S.): Doyle (guitar); Jerry Only (bass guitar); Arthur Googy (drums); Glenn Danzig. Personnel: Glenn Danzig (vocals); O.C. Doyle (guitar); Arthur Googy (drums). Audio Remixers: Glenn Danzig; Chris D. ; Pat Burnett. Recording information: Mixolydian Studios, Boonton, NJ. Photographer: Glenn Brown. The Misfits' 1982 debut full-length, Walk Among Us, rapidly became a legendary effort of U.S. punk, the more so because it so willfully violated many rules which were already ironically straitjacketing the scene. Utterly devoid of political confrontation or social uplift, embracing a costume sense that might have given Kiss pause and generally coming across like the horror-movie nightmares they looked like on the cover, the Misfits just wanted to entertain and do their own thing -- and that they did, brilliantly. Nearly every song on the album -- 13 total, delivered in a light-speed 25 minutes -- is a twisted classic, with the band's trademark '50s/'60s melodies run through a punk/metal meatgrinder on full display. The higher-budget (in very relative terms) recording meant a slightly cleaner and brighter sound all around, but nothing about Walk Among Us is slick, especially in commercial 1982 terms. One song title says it all: "All Hell Breaks Loose." ...
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