| | Saliva Every Six Seconds CD Saliva Discography of CDs
(11 Customer Reviews)
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Saliva: Josey Scott (vocals); Chris Dabaldo, Wayne Swinny (guitar); Dave Novotny (bass); Paul Crosby (drums). Additional personnel: Swinny (guitar, lap steel, banjo, mandolin). "Your Disease" was nominated for the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance. Personnel: Josey Scott (vocals); Wayne Swinny (guitar, lap steel guitar, banjo, mandolin); Chris Dabaldo (guitar); Paul Crosby (drums). Audio Mixers: John Goodmanson; Ron Saint Germain; Steve Thompson ; Bob Marlette. Recording information: A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA; The Blue Room Studios. Photographer: Joseph Cultice. Unknown Contributor Roles: Josey Scott; Wayne Swinny; Dave Novotny; Paul Crosby. On its major label debut, Every Six Seconds, Saliva gets a heavier sound and a way more polished production than the band's self-titled debut of four years earlier. The Memphis outfit has a better way with a melodic hook than some of its peers, which is fortunate, since singer Josey Scott's more frequent forays into rap-metal can sound a little forced. The production brings in a huge bottom sound absent from Saliva, as well as a few newfound electronic touches that hit upon the all-important Nine Inch Nails touchstone. So, Every Six Seconds is a pretty well-crafted alternative metal album overall. But, as with many other bands of its ilk, the elements that set Saliva apart from the rest of the alt-metal pack are really apparent only to the genre's hardcore faithful. ~ Steve Huey While this hard-rocking quintet churns out gut-crunching guitar riffs capable of giving Korn or Limp Bizkit a run for their money, EVERY SIX SECONDS isn't a gravy train-riding rap-metal endeavor. From the sound of things, Saliva has learned a thing or two from the ominous, minor-key melodies of '90s grunge-related acts like Alice In Chains and the instantly accessible hooks of poppier types such as Collective Soul. While much of the album is spent at an intensity level of 11, there are moments (particularly the reflective "Hollywood") of relative melodic respite. Saliva sounds fully capable of pinning back the ears of any teenage mosh-pit denizen, but there are a few moments on this disc that wouldn't sound at all out of place in any given Top 40 radio format.Alternative Press (5/01, p.88) - 3 out of 5 - "...A pop-metal band with a penchant for pretty, angst-ridden melodies for lonely boys and girls..." CMJ (3/12/01, p.19) - "...Of-the-moment aggro, with an emphasis on rapcore moments interrupted by melodic, clean vocals..." Saliva Every Six Seconds Songs Every Six Seconds Music Review Average Rating: (4.4 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews this album rocks they the song lackluster on the game test drive it had a dance mix and a remix it was awsome that was one of the first songs i herd by them the others first songs i herd by them was click click boom and superstar those songs was on the fast and the furious cd and thin thats when i looked for their cds and got all of them (i think) my favorites on this cd is musta been wrong,disease,after me,greater than less than,faultline,doperide,my goodbyes specially my goodbyes it makes me think of a furunal or somebodys dieying i love that song rock on Submitted by kronk1508 (elkton,va,usa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
wake up call very good disc. its modern rock at its finest. very hard but yet soft. maening, its not over powering as metal. just good rock with a solid sound. i recommend it. Submitted by ezgonina (chicagoland)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Rocks! saliva has a great album...solid throughout, not a bad tune on it. funny they sound a lot like duran-duran on steroids. overall great album. Submitted by a reviewer (kailua, hi , usa)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Surprisingly Good I remember Saliva getting a lot of buzz when this album first came out, with people saying they weren't just another nu-metal band, so I figured I'd give it a whirl one day when I saw it cheap. For nu-metal, this is solid, above-average stuff. The first single "Your Disease" is probably the worst song on the disc, but there are some definite highlights elsewhere, like "Lackluster," "Musta Been Wrong," "After Me," and "Hollywood." Josey Scott's voice is a lot more dynamic than most of your guy-next-door nu-metal singers. I could do without the rap parts, particularly the cheesy "Click Click Boom," but again, this isn't half bad. I liked this CD a lot, surprising myself, when I first got it. I dug it out the other night and put it on, and unfortunately, found myself hitting the skip button through several songs. This just doesn't hold my interest anymore, and if you've moved on from nu-metal at all, you might find yourself getting bored as well, but if this is your cup of tea, it's a pretty safe bet. Submitted by Fizz (Delmarva) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
I used to like these guys but.... not anymore. When I first got this album I loved it and it looked like it was going to be part of my life forever but after awhile I found out I was starting to dislike it. The guitar work sounds similar on almost every song and is very unimaginary, the drums are pretty poor (you pretty much only hear the snare and cymbals but no bass, it's mixed so low) and Josey's voice sometimes get's annoying especially on Beg. His lyrics are basically the same depressing thing over and over. Some songs are ok but I can live without them. I moved on to better bands like Sevendust and many others. Only get this if you liked the two singles but if you want something better and more worth your time get some Sevendust, Korn, Deftones, Cold, Finger Eleven, Disturbed, Fuel, Incubus and some other good bands. Submitted by Markendust (Temple, TX, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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