| | Strapping Young Lad Alien CD Strapping Young Lad Discography of CDs
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Never mind System of a Down's irresistibly quirky Serj Tankian. If any heavy metal musician were picked to represent the musically adept but incurably goofy spirit of Frank Zappa, it would probably be gifted lunatic Devin Townsend, whose prolific and eclectic output -- not to mention blackened sense of humor -- over the course of a steadily lengthening career continues to amaze and confuse in equal quantities. Through those years, Strapping Young Lad, while ostensibly a "group," has served as the most common laboratory for Townsend's wacky solo experiments, but word is, studio album number four, 2005's fittingly named Alien, is their first true band effort. This is somewhat rather hard to ascertain, but there's no disputing the additional claim about the album constituting an exercise in catharsis, nor the fact that few bands choose song titles as descriptive of their contents as SYL. To wit, "Imperial" comprises Scandinavian-flavored black metal of earth-scorching intensity, the nearly unpronounceable "Skeksis" contains a suitably schizophrenic and disorienting art rock-metal cacophony, and "Shitstorm" offers, well, a sh*tstorm of unprecedented madness, rife with giggle-inducing lyrics and a children's choir all crammed inside. Moving right along, lest we be overcome by the oncoming rush, "Love?" delivers intentionally dumb lyrics via chorused harmonies (think King's X from hell), "Shine" channels Fear Factory's nightmarish industrial metal (and explains bassist Byron Stroud's parallel work with that group), the blazing hilarity of "We Ride" thrashes itself into an absolute froth, the riffs of "Possessions" groove like they were played by Dimebag Darrell, and the impossibly gentle "Two Weeks" finally forces the collapse of the entire record, which implodes into its own black hole, taking along with it the plaintive acoustic guitar and whispering sweetness. This is but a brief reprieve, however, as the obscurely named "Thalamus" racks up the volume while introducing the first widespread use of melodic keyboards thus far, the unforgiving "Zen" finally bucks tradition by being anything but, and, in what may constitute the album's only unpardonable fumble, the ironically named "Infodump" is just that: a 12-minute reservoir for mostly useless feedback and static noises. At least if one has made it this far it's become easier to accept those statements about a "band effort," what with former Front Line Assembly guitarist Jed Simon and the aforementioned Stroud lending industrial cred while matching Townsend's guitar flurries throughout, and drumming monolith Gene Hoglan making all the stylistic variations seem absolutely effortless, as usual. Which is to say that Alien is a reliably varied and strange outing for Strapping Young Lad, but its uniquely violent methods may leave fans of the group's kookier side(s) just a little disappointed. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Strapping Young Lad: Devin Townsend (vocals, guitar); Jed Simon (guitar); Byron Stroud (bass instrument); Gene Hoglan (drums).
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.Alternative Press (p.128) - 4 out of 5 - "ALIEN is very obviously Strapping Young Lad: grandiose guitar sounds, machine-gun drumming, keyboard lunges and parries, huge - and we mean huge - choruses throttling the demons in frontman Devin Townsend's head." Strapping Young Lad Alien Songs Alien Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews OMfG! IF you like it hard, loud, and painful, buy this now. Devin Townsend and Crew have totally lost it on this album. It is nothing short of complete insanity - and it is beautiful. Crazy drumming, insane riffs, and screams so loud - you could swear Devin was having an Aneurysm...however it is spelled. Dean in CT. Submitted by Dean (New Haven, CT) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Metal of Chaos!!! New album from these Canadian quartet with more Heavy riffs and Chaos sounds!! these is the 2nd album i bought since their last SYL, its sounds so Perfect for a Soundtrax Metal which is something really New for the Underground scenes...!!!
i don't have to force you all to buy but you will feel so regretful if you don't have a CD for these Band, Brilliant in any forms!!! i mostly like the Heavy guitar riffs so much much Heavier than anyone can have!!!
Submitted by ssareff (Brunei Darussalam ( South East Asia ))  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Holy alien poop on a stick!!!!!!!!!!!!!! What an intense band.......now SYL has returned with Alien. Their previous album was great(I give it 4 stars) but this one out of control. The songs are better,heavier and faster. And the production blows the previous album away. Some real awesome stuff here........thundering drums, thick low bass lines, great guitar work and ofcourse Devin's voice.......ah what bliss. Love the male and female choir............this album is EPIC. If you love heavy music then this is what your looking for.....hands down (already) a favorite and one of the best in 2005!!!!!!!!! Submitted by themusicfiend (Florida)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Heavy as a new meaning! I'm a huge SYL fan and I have to say I'm in love with this album...They came back with an awesome arsenal of crazy samples and crazy riffs along with the amazing
vocals from Devin Townsend.All I have to say is you haven't heard wath SYL is all about unless you've heard this one! Submitted by hellfire_seb (Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
gargatuan wall of chaos this is the ultimate metal album,
hoglan force drums, hevy devy as hell guitars, the beat starts here poo heads
buy this album or else glen danzig will
eat you. Submitted by Benzer (vancouver B.C.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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$10.75 The Venice, Italy based Ensoph have been described as "avant-garde gothic metal," but they don't sound anything like Lacuna Coil and other gothic metal bands that have come out of Italy. Actually, Rex Mundi X-Ile is probably best described as futuristic alternative metal with elements of industrial, goth, EBM, black metal, and progressive metal. That is an intriguing variety of influences, and the intrigue factor is fairly high on this early 2009 release, which successfully contrasts the extreme and the melodic. Rex Mundi X-Ile has its brutal, abrasive moments, but overall, the disc is relatively musical -- and Ensoph enjoy contrasting extreme vocals with clean vocals. The extreme vocals favor the type of harsh, abrasive rasp that reigns supreme in black metal, but without those rasp vocals, people probably wouldn't think of black metal as being one of Ensoph's influences on this 54-minute CD (which is dominated by original material but also contains an interesting cover of Alice in Chains' "Would?"). And even with the inclusion of rasp vocals, no one will think that Ensoph sound like Dark Funeral or Emperor; the material is way too industrialized to be mistaken for black metal. That industrialization is a positive thing -- at least if one has a taste for industrial rock and EBM and appreciates the rhythmic quality that Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, KMFDM, and Rob Zombie have favored. ...
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