| | Protest The Hero Fortress CD Protest The Hero Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Personnel: Rody Walker, Rody Walker (vocals); Arif Mirabdolbaghi (bass violin); Vadim Pruzhanov (keyboards); Moe Carlson (drums); Moe Carlson (drum); Dan FILA (percussion); Tim Millar, Luke Hoskin (guitar, acoustic guitar, piano). Recording information: Metal Works Recording Studio; Silo Recording Studio. Editors: Marco Bressette; Giancarlo Gallo. Photographer: David Schrott. With a whiplash sound and a sense of urgency near unmatched in their native Canada, Protest the Hero come off like the tantrum-prone child of Faith No More and System of a Down. Prone to both operatic highs and grinding, coal-black lows, the band shows both the chops and the guts to pull off complex, progressive arrangements on FORTRESS. Though it's only their second full-length, the band's science is never less than airtight, with songs like "The Dissentience" showing off twisting Yngwie Malmstein-worthy neo-classical shred and adventurous structures that careen through various tempos and styles. Protest the Hero's Fortress owes much of its sound to progressive metal, even if its post-hardcore and punk metal influences are still evident. The new sound is detectable as soon as vocalist Rody Walker begins singing on the opening song, "Bloodmeat," when an initial quick burst of a verse gives way to chorus that floats over pounding rhythms and a background string section. The piece sets the tone for what is to come; Fortress is just as aggressive and intense as the band's debut album, Kezia, but not as dark, even as Walker shifts between operatic melodies and guttural grunts and screams. (This happens frequently throughout Fortress, and the singer is adept at both.) Both albums carry a theme throughout -- Kezia is a "situationist requiem," according to the band, while Fortress is ostensibly about goddess worship -- but the latter is more consistent in its presentation. Whereas Kezia concentrated more on Protest the Hero's achieving technical expertise, Fortress is from a band whose abilities have caught up with their vision. The album is deeper, stronger, more original, and consequently more fun. More risks are taken, from the nearly hidden horns on "The Dissentience" to the shimmering piano solo at the beginning of "Sequoia Throne" and the playful interlude that bridges "Palms Read" and "Limb from Limb." Protest the Hero is having fun with their creativity here, and Fortress is a better album for it. However, it all goes by a bit too quickly -- the songs may be epic, but the entire album is pounding and frantic. What should be a marathon is conducted at a sprinting pace, and if there's any complaint, it's that there is no time to slow down and appreciate how far Protest the Hero has come since their debut album. There are plenty of interesting things that take place on Fortress, but it may take repeated listens to take it all in. ~ Katherine FultonAlternative Press (p.116) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[They] weave bold melodies into the album's thundering riffage, hinting at a growing musical maturity..." Protest The Hero Fortress Songs Purchase Fortress CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Morbid Angel Covenant CD (1993)
Fortress
$8.69 Morbid Angel: David Vincent (vocals, bass); Trey Azagthoth (guitar); Pete Sandoval (drums). Producer: Morbid Angel, Flemming Rasmussen. Recorded at Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida. Personnel: David Vincent (vocals, bass guitar); Trey Azagthoth (guitar, keyboards); Pete Sandoval (drums). Audio Mixer: Flemming Rasmussen. Recording information: Morrisound Studios, Tampa, FL. Photographer: Luton Sinfield. Covenant started to bring Morbid Angel up out of the underground, as MTV gave them wider exposure on its late Headbanger's Ball. Guitarist Trey Azagthoth plays complicated, heavily detuned riffs, some with a lightning-fast picking style and ...
| | Shirley Horn I Remember Miles CD (1998)
Fortress
$12.39 Personnel: Shirley Horn (vocals, piano); Roy Hargrove (trumpet, flugelhorn); Toots Thielemans (harmonica); Charles Ables, Ron Carter (bass); Steve Williams, Al Foster (drums). Recorded at Clinton Recording Studios, New York, New York from December 2-5, 1997. I REMEMBER MILES won the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance. Personnel: Shirley Horn (vocals, piano); Toots Thielemans (harmonica); Buck Hill (tenor saxophone); Roy Hargrove (trumpet, flugelhorn); Steve Williams , Steve Williams , Al Foster (drums). Audio Mixer: Dave Baker . Liner Note Author: Ira Gitler. Recording information: Clinton Recording Studios, New York, NY (12/02/1997-12/05/1997). Illustrator: Miles Davis. Arranger: Shirley Horn. No thanks to the paucity of musical genius in the latter half of the 1990s, tribute albums to the departed just kept pouring forth, although in Shirley Horn's case, she was repaying an old personal debt to her subject. After all, it was Miles Davis who originally got Horn out of D.C. in 1960 as his opening act at the Village Vanguard and contributed his trumpet to one of her comeback albums (1990's You Won't Forget Me). Not only that, Horn's understated, laconic, ...
| | Slipknot - Disasterpieces DVDs (2002)
Fortress
$17.29 Featuring the band in their element - the live arena - this full-length live show is a stunning mix of visual mayhem and brutal, extreme heavy metal. No band around can top the Slipknot experience, with ...
| | Protest The Hero Kezia CD (2006)
Fortress
$9.75 Live Recording
Protest the Hero: Rody Walker, Tim Millar, Luke Hoskin (vocals); Moe Carlson (drums). Personnel: Jadea Kelly (vocals); Luke Hoskin (guitar, piano); Tim Millar, Marco Bressette (guitar). Recording information: Silo Recording Studio (2005). Photographer: Ivan Otis. Canadian punk-metal band Protest The Hero play amped-up, technically precocious, complex rock & roll on their debut full-length release, the concept album KEZIA. "No Stars Over Bethlehem" is a concentrated dose of mile-a-minute precision musicianship, while "Heretics and Killers" is propelled by searing guitar and drums, and the intricate time changes and turn-on-a-dime arrangements of "She Who Mars the Skin of Gods" suggest that the band, who were barely college age on KEZIA'S 2006 release, have a bright future in metal-jazz fusion. Apart from the fact that the members of Protest the Hero were in their late teens when ...
| | Children Of Bodom: Chaos Ridden Years - Stockholm Knockout Live DVD (2006)
Fortress
$12.39
| | Dream Theater Systematic Chaos: Special Edition CD (2007) With DVD; Special Edition
Fortress
$18.75
| | Rondo Veneziano Fantasia Di Primavera CD (1999) (Import) Germany
Fortress
$9.15
| | Bernie Torme Back To Babylon CD (1985)
Fortress
$14.35
| | Dean Martin Some Enchanted Evening CD (2000) (Import) Netherlands
Fortress
$10.49 A compilation of 18 tracks recorded in the '50s, probably on the Martin & Lewis radio show, Some Enchanted Evening offers little more than Dean Martin's ebullient voice. The material isn't among his most popular, though collectors may be interested in a few spare novelties that were never recorded for Capitol or Reprise, like the salacious "Take Your Girlie to the Movies." Add to that the absence of documentation and the spotty sound that radio recordings often have, and the album sinks still further. Martin, though, always takes the proper tone with these pleasantries, capering through the songs -- whether it's "Room Full of Roses" or "Darktown Strutters' Ball" -- with the greatest of ease. Virtually the same program has been reissued elsewhere many times, twice with the same title. ~ John Bush A compilation of 18 tracks recorded in the '50s, probably on the Martin & Lewis ...
| | Beseech Sunless Days CD (2005)
Fortress
$19.79 Swedish dark metallers Beseech release their fifth album, the follow-up to last year's Drama. Recorded in Sweden and set to include a cover of the Danzig track 'Devil's Plaything'. 10 tracks in all. Napalm. 2005.
Beseech: Lotta Höglin, Erik Molarin, Robert Vintervind. Personnel: Lotta Höglin, Erik Molarin (vocals); Robert Vintervind, Manne Engstrom (guitar); Jonas Strömberg (drums). Audio Mixer: Christian Silver. Recording information: StudiOmega. The self-described symphonic goth metal of Sweden's Beseech has heretofore stayed remarkably consistent, considering the level of personnel turmoil the band has been through since their 1995 debut. Now expanded to a septet from their original five-man lineup, Sunless Days finds the band more comfortably integrating their two most recent arrivals, singers Erik Molarin and Lotta Höglin, into the familiar Beseech sound, and the changes, while minor, are striking. Molarin's moody baritone recalls, at times, both Bauhaus' Peter Murphy and Type O Negative's Pete Steele, and it's a more effective asset for the band than the usual strident death metal growl. Similarly, Höglin's not an operatic soprano, which gives her vocals a warmer and more inviting tone than most female singers in similar bands. Add in the subtle way in which second guitarist Robert Vintervind integrates electronic textures into songs like "A Bittersweet Tragedy" and it's clear that Beseech is expanding their original sound, de-emphasizing the "metal" in favor of a greater focus on the "goth." It's a smart move that plays to the group's strengths. The digipak ...
| | John Mayall Diary Of A Band 1 & 2 CD (2008) (Import) SHM-CD
Fortress
$66.99
| | Boston Christmas Album CD (2008) (Import)
Fortress
$23.65
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