| | Gojira Way Of All Flesh CD Gojira Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Randy Blythe (vocals). Audio Mixer: Logan Mader. On its fourth album, THE WAY OF ALL FLESH, the French metal act Gojira presents a dark, dynamic, and assured outing. Clearly bristling with creative energy, the record ranges from the techno-rock of "A Sight to Behold" to the grindcore-inspired "All the Tears" to "The Art of Dying," a percussive, moody number. Easily one of the most intriguing metal albums of 2008, FLESH is sure to please Gojira's dedicated fans. Rarely ones to work with the most accelerated of timetables to begin with (especially when touring opportunities kept on beckoning) France's Gojira kept fans waiting all of three years between their breakthrough album, From Mars to Sirius, and its all-important successor, The Way of All Flesh. Luckily, by the time it finally emerged in late 2008, Gojira's fourth full-length successfully met most all of the understandably heightened expectations head on, opening strong with a pair of typically syncopated, groove-driven numbers in "Oroborus" and the harmonics-punctuated "Toxic Garbage Island," then repeatedly upping the compositional ante with a string of imaginative progressive headbangers (e.g., "All the Tears," "Wolf Down the Earth," and album-best "The Art of Dying") that were rife with technical fireworks and songwriting variety. Yes, there were also a few failed experiments and indifferent offerings, including instrumental interlude "The Silver Cord" (which barely even registers amidst the surrounding sonic beatings), and the techno effects, jumpy chords, and whiny clean vocals that make the first half of "A Sight to Behold" sound like a bad imitation of hip-hop rockers Cypress Hill (clean vocals are a limiting factor throughout, actually, also contributing to the dull grind of "Vacuity"). But whereas first-time listeners were likely suffering from some serious metal fatigue by the arrival of the 75-minute album's 17-minute title song (give or take a few interruptions and tacked-on "hidden tracks"), devoted Gojira fans were surely grateful to have this much music to digest while beginning the likely long wait for the band's next offering. Until that day comes, The Way of All Flesh provides another fascinating chapter in Gojira's ever more impressive catalog. ~ Eduardo RivadaviaSpin (p.104) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Like the good postmodern thrashers they are, Gojira blend blast beats, sludge stomp and death-and-doom riff spirals with unexpected quirks..." Alternative Press (p.158) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Gojira ration their optimism, dispensing it as needed alongside doomsaying screeds and power-plodding dirges....There's no denying this album's rich humanity." Kerrang (Magazine) - "[A] pervasive apocalyptic tone which offsets despair and hope serves to unite the songs, the vocal performance of Joe Duplantier never less than riveting as he puts everything he has behind every syllable." Kerrang (Magazine) (p.63) - Ranked #9 in Kerrang's Best Albums Of The Year 2008 -- "Like a precision metal machine, the French foursome effortlessly blew away almost every other metal band..." Gojira Way Of All Flesh Songs Way Of All Flesh Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   A band that would make Fear Factory proud The record stands out to crush its competition because I know what really sounds like sounds enticing. If you wanna know what metal should sound like, look no further. Come and meet your matchmaker of Fear Factory, right out of France (no doubt!) Stunning as I have ever heard! Submitted by gaffaw (Edmonton, AB, CANADA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Excellent album, but bloated. TWOTF is an excellent tech/death album. The Duplantier brothers are really amazing young musicians. This contains absolute bulldozer riffing and the drumming is completely ridiculous. I think the songs are well written. However, this is where my one complaint comes in, the album length is way to long at 75 minutes. Gojira, imo could have trimmed the "fat" off of this by about 10-15 minutes. Personally, that is a better listening time for me. Remember, music does not have to be of eccessive duration to accomplish it's artful intention. Maybe in the future Gojira will remember the "less is more" approach. Still an excellent album. Take a 1/2 star off for being bloated. More like a 4/5. Don't miss this!!! Submitted by Donovan (Pittsburgh, Pa.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 1 found this helpful.
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Purchase Way Of All Flesh CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Gojira From Mars To Sirius CD (2006)
Way Of All Flesh
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| | Isis In The Absence Of Truth CD (2006)
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| | Gojira Link CD (2005) (Import) Sweden
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| | Meshuggah Obzen CD (2008)
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| | Amon Amarth Twilight Of The Thunder God CD (2008) With DVD; Digipak
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| | Bloodbath Fathomless Mastery CD (2008)
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| | St Patrick's Day Festival CD (1999) (Import) Germany
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| | Driving Beat: Uk Freakbeat Rarities CDs (2008) (Import) United Kingdom
Way Of All Flesh
$58.45 Devoted to the hybrid of '60s mod, British Invasion, and psychedelia known as "freakbeat," the series That Driving Beat ran to five volumes in the first decade of the 21st century. This five-CD box set brings them all together, presenting around 150 rarities from the 1963-1967 era, most of them British (a few items from Continental Europe are also thrown in). Pinpointing who this should be recommended to is tough, because any passionate collector of freakbeat is already going to have some to a lot (but almost certainly not all) of it. At the same time, it's likely too much for the novice, for whom single-volume comps with a higher percentage of killer cuts make far better initiations. But make no mistake: this certainly is good value if you like the style and don't have the majority of the contents, and not just for the sheer quantity of the material. Odd tracks like the Poets' "That's the Way It's Got to Be" and Him & the Others' "She's Got Eyes That Tell Lies" aside, there aren't that many absolute undisputed monsters of the genre here, most of it's at least decent, and good percentage of it is quite good. To name just a few songs, the Plebs' "Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You," the Remo 4's "Sing Hallelujah," the Hi-Numbers' "Heart of Stone" (not to be confused with the High Numbers who became the Who), and the Mike Cotton Sound's "I Don't Wanna Know" are not only really good obscure British Invasion recordings, but not all that easy to find on other reissues. On the other hand, a good number of selections are OK but nothing more, and there are too many covers of ...
| | Uphill Racer Telescopeland CD (2008)
Way Of All Flesh
$15.15 Deserved credit to Uphill Racer, the nom de plum of Oliver Lichtl -- over the course of three albums he has bootstrapped considerably from being just another fan of big arrangements in a fairly indie rock style ...
| | Jarboe Mahakali CD (2008)
Way Of All Flesh
$10.69 Personnel: Jarboe (vocals, keyboards); Philip H. Anselmo, Attila Csihar (vocals); Kevin Hufnagel, Josh Graham, Colin Marston (guitar); Kris Force (violin); Julia Kent (cello); Cedric Victor (bass instrument); Jeff Eber, Vincent Signorelli (drums). Since her days with the extremist 1980s noise rockers Swans, Jarboe has always had a singular vision for her music. MAHAKALI is a typically forbidding document, this time a song cycle based on the Hindu goddess of destruction, Kali. Jarboe and her collaborators incorporate extended feedback drones, industrial disco beats, elements of Scandinavian-style death metal, and passages of unexpected delicacy into this 15-track set, highlighted by the eight-minute centerpiece, "Transmogrification." Ever since her debut solo release, Red, in 1991, singer, songwriter, conceptualist, and producer Jarboe has been staking out territory for herself that only she can inhabit. Her musical reach extends far beyond "alternative" music, and becomes its own genre. Its aesthetic is often associated with noise, folk elements, extreme metal, and the avant-garde. Released in 2008, Mahakali is a logical next step for Jarboe in that it brings her full circle in many ways to her beginnings with Swans. As the title indicates, the set is an album-length ...
| | Down The Lees Guest Room CD (2008)
Way Of All Flesh
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| | Quincy Jones Orchestra Swingin Miss D CD (2009) (Import) Bonus Tracks
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| | Peekers Life In The Air CD (2009) Digipak
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