| | Mnemic Passenger CD Mnemic Discography of CDs
(7 Customer Reviews)
"Mainly Neurotic Energy Modifying Instant Creation" (the acronym for Mnemic) is a pummeling and punching quintet of five Danes who've been hanging out on the fringes of the scene since 1998. They've quietly and persuasively won an international audience for themselves based on their original demos and their two previous albums -- 2004's Audio Injected Soul was universally acclaimed for its blend of speed, texture, genre-bending styles and sheer aggression. Passenger goes a step further, but with a twist: the band's new vocalist is Guillaume Bideau (ex- Scarve). Recorded in L.A. with Fear Factory's Christian Olde Wolbers at the helm, Passenger is a study in human entropy: the lack of involvement in one's life leads to not only the wrong kind of pacifism, but to the decay of the senses, of logic, and of the ability to make sense of emotions, psychological states and spiritual impulses; one can site inspirational sources from Jean-Paul Sartre to Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. There are many inspirations for the themes in these songs, but what matters is that they rock like an unholy prophet assembling the masses for deprogramming. Drummer Brian Rasmussen is among the finest practicing the fine art of metal attack: he's the Keith Moon of metal; simultaneously all over the kit, sending out volcanic slabs of blast tempered only by his uncanny sense of time. He never misses -- all one needs is a listen to the intro of "Pigfuck" for evidence. As for the rest of this insanely musical crew, they can quick-change like Meshuggah and tear down the walls between death metal, industrial, and thrash without even trying. And they can write actual hooks: the beautiful, seamless four-part harmonic vocal break in "In the Nothingness Black," with its slippery keyboard lines is simply ingenious. The twin guitar attack in "Meaningless" adds a new, elliptical chapter in the evolution of the new metal. The powerful riffing in "Psykorgasm" contains within it a gorgeous melodic guitar line that flows throughout the piece, changing shapes and time signatures effortlessly. While there is nothing remotely civilized about Mnemic's Passenger, it is nonetheless as sophisticated musically and intellectually as it is completely emotionally and musically unhinged from what's come before. Passenger is the album that should put them on the map for good. They've earned it, and this feels like just the beginning. ~ Thom Jurek
Mnemic: Mircea Gabriel Eftemie (vocals, guitar); Guillaume Bideau (vocals); Rune Stigart (guitar); Tomas Cowan Koefoed (bass guitar); Brian Rasmussen (drums).
Additional personnel: Jeff Walker , Shane Embury (vocals).
Kerrang (Magazine) (p.49) - "[T]hey unrelentingly head for the jugular throughout....It's still 100 per cent vicious..." Passenger Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Album of the year I love this album. I didn't get it after the first the couple of spins but now I simply listen to it every day. The hooks are phenomenal, and the new singer is as much a screamer as a singer. That's a good thing! Submitted by jespermoller2 (Maryland) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 2 of 4 found this helpful.
passenger Album of the year.... buy it now!!! Submitted by 65 (Liverpool, NY, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 2 of 4 found this helpful.
great album produced by christian olde wolberg (fear factory that was the first time i heard this band wow its look like fear factory or strapping young lad listen it,by it,you will not regret Submitted by psycosomatic_ (Nicolas Montreal,QC,Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 2 of 4 found this helpful.
great album produced by christian olde wolberg (fear factory that was the first time i heard this band wow its look like fear factory or strapping young lad listen it,by it,you will not regret Submitted by psycosomatic_ (Montreal,QC,Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 2 of 4 found this helpful.
great album produced by christian olde wolberg (fear factory that was the first time i heard this band wow its look like fear factory or strapping young lad listen it,by it,you will not regret Submitted by psycosomatic_ (Montreal,QC,Canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 2 of 4 found this helpful.
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Purchase Passenger CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
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| | Sepultura Under A Pale Grey Sky CD (2002) Japan
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$44.25 Recorded live at Brixton Academy, London, England on December 16, 1996.
To combat the sales backlash that began when Derrick Green took singer/guitarist Max Cavalera's spot in the group, Roadrunner Records released the live document Under a Pale Grey Sky. Recorded in the very short period between the death of his stepson and his exit from the group, Cavalera's performance is nothing short of breathtaking. His venomous roar has rarely sounded this raw and heartfelt, he screams with a fury that comes deep from within, and he delivers a performance that pulls the listener uncomfortably close. Guitarist Andreas Kisser is also in fine form, offering an eerie, melodic counterpoint to Cavalera's pounding riffs. One only needs to look to "Endangered Species" to see why the two guitarists were a masterful pairing, with Kisser pasting blistering and shrill ...
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| | Lennie Tristano CD (1998)
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$10.19 Lennie Tristano didn't record much. In fact, there are only two studio releases from the LP era (and one half of TRISTANO is live). TRISTANO is from 1955 on Atlantic and features some innovative use of overdubbing on Side One, which gives the music a prescient "electronic" feeling. These are mostly impromptu improvisations, although all are executed at the pianist's high level of harmonic invention. Side Two features a quartet with Lee Konitz, who spent his professional life bringing the Tristano gospel to the masses. And what better place than a Chinese restaurant as the group play through a set of standards. It's too bad Lennie Tristano himself never saw fit to record something similar for Verve or Prestige during his middle phase.
Lennie Tristano's Atlantic debut was a controversial album at the time of its release. Though Tristano was regarded as a stellar and innovative bebop pianist, he had been absent from recording for six years and had founded a jazz school where he focused instead on teaching. The first four tunes on this set shocked the jazz world at the time of their release (though not critic Barry Ulanov, who was Tristano's greatest champion and wrote the liner notes for the set). The reason was that on those four original tunes -- "Line Up," "Requiem," "Turkish Mambo," and ...
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