| | Thine Eyes Bleed In The Wake Of Separation CD Thine Eyes Bleed Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $10.09 CDFor Sale Limited Availability
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The temptation is certainly strong, but one should try not to look down upon Canadian neo-thrashers Thine Eyes Bleed just because they were founded by a former guitar tech of atrocious nu-metal band Kittie -- not least because their 2005 debut, In the Wake of Separation, is already far superior to any of that group's pathetic albums. In fact, the manic flurry of opener "Cold Victim" and its slightly less frantic and more involved (arrangement-wise) followers, "Without Warning" and "And Since Forgotten," prove quite impressive by any standards. Four songs in, this deathly thrash barrage is finally snapped when "Live to Die" breaks off into a slower passage, capped by the disc's first use of clean vocals; then it's back to the races with the absolutely pummeling "Corpse You Up." Through them all, frontman Justin Wolfe contributes another layer of intensity with his ragged screeching, but, as is the case with so many neo-thrash hopefuls, once the initial excitement of hearing such fast and furious music abates, one finds it hard to remember anything all that special about the songs. This is particularly true of this album's final four tracks -- that's right, only four more numbers for a spare total of nine, and barely over 36 minutes of music. That last characteristic denotes this as an obvious attempt on Thine Eyes Bleed's part to follow in the footsteps of earlier, 30-minute extreme metal classics such as Slayer's Reign in Blood, Entombed's Wolverine Blues, and At the Gates' Slaughter of the Soul -- none of which In the Wake of Separation even remotely compares to, in terms of songwriting or visionary substance. However, given a little more experience and time to develop their compositional chops, there's always hope for improvement on future efforts. And, for what it's worth, this is a whole lot better than Kittie! ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Recording information: MetalWorks Studios; Vyner Road Studios.
Photographer: Reinhold Scherer.
Thine Eyes Bleed: Derek Ward (guitar); Johnny Araya (bass guitar); Darryl Stephens (drums); Justin Wolfe, Jeff Phillips.
Personnel: Justin Wolfe (vocals); Jeff Phillips (guitar).
In The Wake Of Separation Music Thine Eyes Bleed In The Wake Of Separation Songs | 1. | Cold Victim |
| 2. | Without Warning |
| 3. | And Since Forgotten |
| 4. | Live to Die |
| 5. | Corpse You Up |
| 6. | Innocent Mind |
| 7. | Sliver |
| 8. | Consequence Unknown |
| 9. | Regret Your Fear |
| In The Wake Of Separation Music In The Wake Of Separation Music Review Average Rating: (4.3 out of 5 stars)   great first album one of the best first albums made by a band. Submitted by walkwithme1nhell (hayward, CA, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Freakin' awesome. That about sums it up. If you're a fan of Lamb of God, get this now. It's fast, relentless, harsh, and full of energy. Submitted by Chad (Southern California) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
I Will Rate This 5 Stars.... ....Because it is as high as i will go!
This is the greatest Canadian band on earth! The song cold victim rocks!
If you like Cannibal Corpse, Six Feet Under, and Thorrs Hammer. You will love this album. Submitted by Jonathan (Okotoks, AB, CAN) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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$18.15 Disc one features 13 tracks recorded in concert at Nottingham's Rock City in April 2001. Disc two is packed with surprises including four new remixes, a rare studio demo(n) of 'Scorched Earth Erotica', & enhanced with screen savers, a tool bar skin, & the promo video of 'No Time To Cry'. Snapper Music. 2004.
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| | King Diamond Puppet Master CD (2003) Bonus DVD
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$10.79 This release includes a bonus DVD featuring an interview with King Diamond.
Kim Bendix Petersen, better known as King Diamond, has built an empire out of wailing spirits, singing spiders, and voodoo priestesses. His 11th full-length ghost story, The Puppet Master, centers around an unfortunate man, his girlfriend, and a husband and wife team of puppet masters as they abuse and torture their subjects somewhere in Budapest. Diamond wisely forgoes his usual cheeseball spoken-word intro and simply launches into "Midnight," a melodic dirge that ranks high amongst his huge -- and often inconsistent -- body of work. The brutal "Emerencia" features stellar guitar work from Andy LaRocque -- the thread that binds ...
| | Jethro Tull - Extended Versions CD (2006)
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$5.95 As with all of the releases in the Extended Versions series, the 2006 Jethro Tull edition is a set of latter-day live renditions of some of the group's best-known classics -- which have all been previously released. And as with most Tull releases after, say, 1980, the performances and production here are exceedingly clean-sounding -- in other words, the bite of their classic early-'70s period is nowhere to be found. What you get instead are pretty blah versions of such classics as "Aqualung," "Locomotive Breath," and "Living in the Past." But it's always a gas to hear such lesser-known Tull tunes as "Fat Man" and "Nothing Is Easy," both of which are included here, while a truncated version of "Thick as a Brick" (which still clocks in at over nine minutes) is a rare point where the group truly sounds inspired. For a true collection of classic/definitive Tull, 1985's Original Masters or 2001's Very Best of Jethro Tull will do much better. ~ Greg Prato
As with ...
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