| | Thou Shalt Suffer Into The Woods Of Belial CD Thou Shalt Suffer Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $13.49 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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Recording information: Notodden Lydstudio (04/1991-10/1991).
Thou Shalt Suffer: Ihsahn (vocals, guitar); Samoth (guitar); Thorbjorn (bass guitar, drums); Ildjarn (bass guitar); Ronny (drums).
Personnel: Ihsahn (synthesizer, sound effects); Thorbjorn (drums); Samoth (sound effects).
Into The Woods Of Belial Music Thou Shalt Suffer Into The Woods Of Belial Songs | 1. | Into the Woods of Belial |
| 2. | I Seek the Path of Obscurity |
| 3. | Chimera Dimension |
| 4. | Goat of a Thousand Young, The |
| 5. | Succumb to Vestigita Terrent |
| 6. | Painful Void of Time |
| 7. | Spectral Prophecy |
| 8. | Into the Woods of Belial |
| 9. | Goat of a Thousand Young, The |
| 10. | Chimera Dimension |
| 11. | I Seek the Path of Obscurity - (Burp-Mix) |
| 12. | Obscurity Supreme, ... |
| Into The Woods Of Belial Music Into The Woods Of Belial Review
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Purchase Into The Woods Of Belial CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Satyricon Volcano CD (2003)
Into The Woods Of Belial album
$10.75 Principally recorded at Puk Studios, Denmark, Sweden in 2001.
Uniquely, Volcano designates the first album from one of black metal's elite to be released on a major label (Capitol in Europe; Cradle of Filth's Damnation and a Day would be released several months later on Sony) -- not that Satyricon altered their method of attack much on this, their fifth full-length. In fact, there's little room for compromise within the hoary depths of the genre, unless the tempered use of blastbeats, solid production ...
| | Ihsahn Adversary CD (2006)
Into The Woods Of Belial CD music
$14.05 When a vocalist for a well-known band provides a solo album -- either while he/she is still with the band or after leaving it -- the material might be a big departure from the band's work, a carbon copy of the band's work, or something in between. In the case of former Emperor vocalist/lead guitarist Ihsahn, The Adversary is definitely an example of "something in between." This 2006 release, which is the Norwegian headbanger's first solo project, is neither a carbon copy of Emperor's black metal nor a radical departure from it. The Adversary has a lot to offer from a black metal standpoint, and yet, this is hardly a disc that caters to black metal purists. The black metal that Ihsahn embraces as a solo artist is symphonic ...
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| | Dethklok Metalocalypse: Dethalbum II CDs (2009) Bonus DVD; Deluxe Edition
Into The Woods Of Belial CD music
$15.55 Brendon Small and Gene Hoglan proved their animated death metal band Dethklok had the chops to rock out like a living, breathing group on THE DETHALBUM. On DETHALBUM II, Small and Hoglan make Dethklok sound more like a real band than ever before--for better and worse. Without a doubt, these songs rock hard. The production is tighter and the attack is even ...
| | Dan The Banjo Man CD (1974) (Import) Bonus Tracks; United Kingdom
Into The Woods Of Belial music CDs
$22.35 Confusingly, there's no banjo on the Dan the Banjo Man album, and, even stranger, nobody named "Dan" plays on the set. In fact, Dan the Banjo Man was a Phil Cordell solo project, from the multi-instrumentalist who had sprung into the U.K.'s Top Five under the alias Springwater with his "I Will Return" single in 1971. However, Cordell decided that his new wah-wah guitar sounded like a banjo, and thus the Banjo Man was born. The self-recorded and self-produced set was a true bedroom project, recorded on four-track in the cellar of Cordell's Sussex home. With its lush Moog-y sound, an aura enhanced by the deliriously metallic wah-wah guitar, but shot through with both acoustic and electric guitar, Dan boasts all the symphonic glories of the late '60s/early '70s, but with a pop/rock punch that puts it in a category all its own. The set is cover-heavy, jubilantly so, with an extraordinarily eclectic selection of songs done over in Dan's unique style. The popcorn-popping version of "Oh Susanna," with its spectacular slide guitar break, is perfect to pogo to, while his "rock 'til you drop" version of another piece of Americana, "Jimmy Crack Corn" (retitled "Black Magic") is jaw-dropping. "The Locomotion" is delivered up Rolling Stones' style, but with that wah-wah guitar percolating giddily throughout, Sonny & Cher's signature hit, retitled "I Got You Dan" soars "Freebird"-like towards the heavens, Sam Cooke's "Bring It on Home" is transformed from R&B masterpiece to a C&W-flavored classic, while the exhilarating title track turns Harry Nilsson's "Games People Play" into a banjo-esque slapping knees up. The Banjo Man juggles styles and moods like an acrobat, refashioning golden oldies with such creativity and innovation that one can't help but stand back in amazement, while the originals are just as mouth-watering. This reissue appends eight more recent recordings to the original set, and while none can beat the exhilarating sense of discovery of their predecessors, neither are any out of place here, and several, notably "The Old Chap" and "Django" are their equals. A welcome return for a spectacular album that doesn't sound dated in the least, growing only more magnificent with age. ~ Jo-Ann Greene
Confusingly, there's no banjo on the Dan the Banjo Man album, and, even stranger, nobody named "Dan" plays on the set. In fact, Dan the Banjo Man was a Phil Cordell solo project, from the multi-instrumentalist who had sprung into the U.K.'s Top Five under the alias Springwater with his "I Will Return" single in 1971. However, Cordell decided that his new wah-wah guitar sounded like a banjo, and thus the Banjo Man was born. The self-recorded and self-produced set was a true bedroom project, recorded on four-track in the cellar of Cordell's Sussex home. With its lush Moog-y sound, an aura enhanced by the deliriously metallic wah-wah guitar, but shot through with both acoustic and electric guitar, Dan boasts all the symphonic glories of the late '60s/early '70s, but with a pop/rock punch that puts it in a category all its own. ...
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