| | Scars Of Tomorrow Rope Tied To The Trigger CD Scars Of Tomorrow Discography of CDs
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Orange County's Scars of Tomorrow makes its Victory Records debut with Rope Tied to the Trigger, a furious metalcore statement if there ever was one. The fivesome rocks a thick format indebted to Deftones as much as death metal, committed to layering muscular East Coast hardcore (Sick of It All, Hatebreed) rhythms inside wind-whipping technical efficiency. And it works. Tracks like "To Watch You Burn," "As We Close," and "Will Hell Arise" blend these influences into a volatile, subcutaneously formidable groove -- just like trouble, you feel it before you see it. Other highlights include the furious changes of "Face of Fear" and the interplay of melody and madness during "Suffocating Words," which rips from hardcore to searing metal chording and back to a rousing melody inside four minutes. Scars of Tomorrow's principals are obviously in a lot of emotional pain, or at least angry -- there's all that guttural screaming, after all. But there will be a point in metalcore's future when its busted inkwell of brutal descriptors will run dry. "Burn," "hell," "fear," "dying," "abandonment" -- they're all present and accounted for in Rope Tied to the Trigger's lyrics and titles. There's no denying Scars of Tomorrow's blistering passion. But why not opt for a different raft of adjectives, to make that passion and power stand apart from the jaws-snapping pack? ~ Johnny Loftus
Scars Of Tomorrow: Mike, Chris, Los, Bob, Dave.
Recording information: God City Studios.
Rope Tied To The Trigger Music Scars Of Tomorrow Rope Tied To The Trigger Songs Rope Tied To The Trigger Music Review Purchase Rope Tied To The Trigger CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Paul Butterfield Blues Band CD (1965)
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| | Drive-By Truckers Southern Rock Opera CDs (2001) Digipak
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| | Trivium Ascendancy CD (2005)
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| | Dredg Catch Without Arms CD (2005)
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| | 30 Seconds To Mars Beautiful Lie CD (2005)
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| | Hawkwind Singles A's & B'S CD (2002) (Import) United Kingdom
Rope Tied To The Trigger music CDs
$18.39 1998 compilation on Repertoire featuring 18 of the spacerock act's best singles, both A-sides & B-sides, from 1970-1980. Includes 'Silver Machine', 'Urban Guerilla', 'Hurry OnSundown', 'Sonic Attack' and 'Motorhead'. Digipak. The fulltitle is 'Sonic Boom Killers: Best Of Singles A's And B'sFrom 1970 To 1980'.
Although it is not necessarily the most essential Hawkwind package ...
| | Celtic Frost Vanity/Nemesis CD (1989) Reissue
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$10.59 Few bands in the metal world get a second chance after a major career misstep, and no band exemplifies this problem more than Celtic Frost. Two albums ago (Into the Pandemonium), ...
| | Rapazolla Mais De Mil CD (2005)
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| | Jackie Greene American Myth CD (2006)
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$12.65 American Myth is singer/songwriter Jackie Greene's true debut for the Verve Forecast label. Sweet Somewhere Bound, issued in 2005, was actually recorded for the Dig Music label (where his previous albums appeared) in 2004 and licensed by Universal. American Myth is a much more complex affair than anything he's done previously. The list of players is impressive: from Davey Faragher and Peter Thomas to Greg Leisz and Steve Berlin (who did a fine job producing this set), to name a few. This is the collection that should finally dispel those pesky Bob Dylan comparisons. Greene has grown into his American roots style honestly -- by becoming a better musician. And while there are those fans who would claim that his lyrics may have suffered, his craft as a songwriter has improved immeasurably. "Hollywood" will be the novelty single because of its swaggeringly infectious blues hook, but "So Hard to Find My Way," with its shimmering B3, horns creating a loose, good-time groove underscored by a warm bass line, a strolling banjo, Greene's dobro, and his deft lyrical imagery, all of which make for a better tune. His changeup is fine, too, as evidenced by "Just as Well," which comes immediately after with its introspective acoustic guitar and the dobro and hand percussion intro. This is the kind of summery sidewalk tune that the guys in Sugar Ray would have killed to have written. The accordion fills and Greene's voice, which is so utterly cool and in the pocket, captures and captivates the ...
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