| | Muse Resistance CD Muse Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Personnel: Matthew Bellamy (vocals, guitar, keyboards, synthesizer, programming); Chris Wolstenholme (vocals); Edoardo de Angelis (violin); Dominic Howard (synthesizer, drums, percussion, programming). Audio Mixer: Mark "Spike" Stent. With its titanic guitar solos, symphonic suites, and multi-layered melodies, Muse's fifth album operates under the assumption that bigger is better. This is the very definition of a super-sized album, an album that takes its cues from Queen, its lyrics from science fiction novels, and its delivery from rock opera. It's also the first time that Muse has truly sounded like Muse, as few bands since Queen have so readily explored the intersection of bombast and extravagance. THE RESISTANCE is most certainly extravagant -- there are snatches of classical piano entwined throughout, not to mention bilingual lyrics, concert hall percussion, coronet solos, and song titles like "Exogenesis: Symphony, Pt. 2 (Cross-Pollination)" -- but it's also quite beautiful, capable of moving between prog rock choruses and excerpts from Chopin's "Nocturne in E Flat Major" within the same song. Presiding over the mix is frontman Matthew Bellamy, a man who seemingly aspires to be both Brian May and Freddie Mercury. He plays guitar, pounds the piano, and composes the album's orchestral parts, but his strongest asset is his voice, a sky-scraping tenor dripping with so much emotion that it's almost lewd. He croons, whispers, annunciates, and belts with confidence, a combination that makes him one of England's most dazzling singers in recent memory. And since a virtual mountain of voices is better than a single voice (remember: bigger is better), Bellamy also multi-tracks himself, creating towering stacks of harmonies during songs like "Resistance," "Undisclosed Desires," and the colossal "United States of Eurasia (+Collateral Damage)." With its titanic guitar solos, symphonic suites, and multi-layered melodies, Muse's fifth album operates under the assumption that bigger is better. This is the very definition of a super-sized album, an album that takes its cues from Queen, its lyrics from science fiction novels, and its delivery from rock opera. It's also the first time that Muse has truly sounded like Muse, as few bands since Queen have so readily explored the intersection of bombast and extravagance. The Resistance is most certainly extravagant -- there are snatches of classical piano entwined throughout, not to mention bilingual lyrics, concert hall percussion, coronet solos, and song titles like "Exogenesis: Symphony, Pt. 2 (Cross-Pollination)" -- but it's also quite beautiful, capable of moving between prog rock choruses and excerpts from Chopin's "Nocturne in E Flat Major" within the same song. Presiding over the mix is frontman Matthew Bellamy, a man who seemingly aspires to be both Brian May and Freddie Mercury. He plays guitar, pounds the piano, and composes the album's orchestral parts, but his strongest asset is his voice, a sky-scraping tenor dripping with so much emotion that it's almost lewd. He croons, whispers, annunciates, and belts with confidence, a combination that makes him one of England's most dazzling singers in recent memory. And since a virtual mountain of voices is better than a single voice (remember: bigger is better), Bellamy also multi-tracks himself, creating towering stacks of harmonies during songs like "Resistance," "Undisclosed Desires," and the colossal "United States of Eurasia (+Collateral Damage)." The band's tendency to pile excess upon excess doesn't always yield strong results, and there's a fine line between, say, the anthemic beauty of "Guiding Light" and the bizarre Timbaland-meets-Depeche Mode ambiance of "Undisclosed Desires." Even so, The Resistance is by and large a fantastic record, culminating in a three-song suite that finds the group jumping from classical movements to guitar fretwork to sweeping, swaggering, operatic rock. Those songs occupy the final 16 minutRolling Stone (p.103) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Songs like the industrial-flavored 'Uprising' prove again that Muse know how to whip up an almighty roar." Entertainment Weekly (p.129) - "The album's best track, 'Uprising,' is a simple slice of glam rock..." -- Grade: B Billboard (p.57) - "The three-part rock symphony 'Exogenesis' closes the album, combining elements of piano and the band's dramatic flair." Q (Magazine) (p.102) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[T]heir new adventures in sci-fi hi-fi are, for the most part, hugely impressive. 'Uprising' is a brilliantly addictive opener..." Muse Resistance Songs | | Resistance CD DISC 1: |
| 1. | Uprising  | $1.29 | |
| 2. | Resistance | $1.29 | |
| 3. | Undisclosed Desires | $1.29 | |
| 4. | United States of Eurasia/Collateral Damage - (featuring Matthew Bellamy)  | |
| 5. | Guiding Light | $1.29 | |
| 6. | Unnatural Selection | $1.29 | |
| 7. | Mk Ultra | $1.29 | |
| 8. | I Belong To You/Mon Cour S'ouvre a Ta Voix | |
| 9. | Esogenesis: Symphony Part 1: Overture | |
| 10. | Esogenesis: Symphony Part 2: Cross-Pollination | |
| 11. | Esogenesis: Symphony Part 3: Redemption | |
| | Resistance Songs DISC 2: |
| 1. | [Bonus Material] | |
| Purchase Resistance CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Hatfield & The North Hatfield & The North CD (1974)
Resistance
$9.35 Hatfield & The North: Richard Sinclair (vocals, bass); Phil Miller (guitar); Dave Stewart (piano, organ, synthesizer); Pip Pyle (drums). Additional personnel: Robert Wyatt, Amanda Parsons, Barbara Gaskin, Ann Rosenthal (vocals); Geoff Leigh (flute, saxophone); Jeremy Baines (pixiephone). Personnel: Robert Wyatt (vocals, drums); Ann Rosenthal, Amanda Parsons, Richard Sinclair, Barbara Gaskin (vocals); Phil Miller (guitar); Geoff Leigh (flute, saxophone, wind); Dave Stewart (piano, organ, keyboards); Pip Pyle (drums); Jeremy Baines (wind). Recording information: 10/1974-??/1975. One of the Canterbury scene's most revered bands, Hatfield and the North made up for the brevity of their career with some fascinating music. Always adventurous, the quartet had the keen sense to realize that only the most hardened jazz fans respond to numerous key changes and exceedingly complex time signatures, and thus enlivened their live set with the odd gnome ...
| | Hatfield & The North Rotters' Club CD (1975)
Resistance
$9.19 Personnel: Richard Sinclair (vocals, guitar); Ann Rosenthal, Amanda Parsons, Barbara Gaskin (vocals); Phil Miller (guitar); Jimmy Hastings (flute, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, wind); Tim Hodgkinson (clarinet); Lindsay Cooper (oboe, bassoon, wind); Mont Campbell (horns); Dave Stewart (electric piano, organ, keyboards); Pip Pyle (drums, percussion). Recording information: Saturn, Worthing Recording Studio (06/09/1974-03/16/1975). Unknown Contributor Roles: Ian Gillespie; Ann Rosenthal; Amanda Parsons; Barbara Gaskin. Hatfield and the North's second LP stands as a high watermark for the prog rock associated with England's Canterbury scene and, while filled with stunning musicianship, demonstrates both the strengths and some of the weaknesses of the Hatfield style. Dave Stewart on keyboards, Phil Miller on guitar, Richard Sinclair on bass and vocals, and Pip Pyle on drums (supplemented by a few guest instrumentalists and the ever-ethereal Northettes with ...
| | Muse Showbiz CD (1999)
Resistance
$11.35 Muse: Matthew Bellamy (vocals, guitar, piano, Wurlitzer piano, harmonium, Hammond B-3 organ, Mellotron, string synthesizer, samples); Chris Wolstenholme (acoustic & electric basses, background vocals); Dominic Howard (drums, percussion). Recorded at Rak, London, England and Sawmill Studios, Fowey, Cornwall. Personnel: Matthew Bellamy (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Dominic Howard (drums). Audio Mixers: John Leckie; Paul Reeve; Muse. Photographer: Ralf Strathmann. Unknown Contributor Roles: Chris Wolstenholme; Dominic Howard. The musical touchstone for the British trio Muse is obviously Radiohead and that fact is crystal clear from the smoldering opening cut, "Sunburn." Their John Leckie-produced debut, Showbiz, is strong on angst-filled vocals, esoteric lyrics, and dramatic shifts in sonic dynamics. Hailing from rural England, singer/guitarist Matthew Bellamy, bassist Chris Wolstenholme, and drummer Dominic Howard average 20 years of age, so there's plenty of potential for them to ...
| | Horrors Strange House CD (2007) Enhanced CD
Resistance
$9.99 This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Horrors (UK): Faris Rotter (vocals); Joshua Von Grimm (guitar). On their singles and EPs, the Horrors proved they'd done their post-punk and freakbeat homework. With their debut album, Strange House, they push their sound forward, distill it to its rawest essence, and give it a few funhouse mirror twists and turns for good measure. Almost half of the songs on the album already appeared on previous Horrors releases, but the ever-so-slightly cleaner production here gives more definition to their black-on-black sound. The band kicks off Strange House by revisiting their cover of Screaming Lord Sutch's "Jack the Ripper," which begins at a zombie-slow pace, then suddenly speeds up halfway through, transforming into a hurtling roller coaster of a song that makes a great introduction to Strange House's mix of campy humor, energy, and menace. With its dive-bombing noise barely held together by Faris Badwan's shouting and the faintest hint of a melody, "Sheena Is a Parasite" is still ...
| | Trivium Shogun CDs (2008) With DVD; Special Edition
Resistance
$18.75 The band unleashes their most cohesive an mature effort with this DVD/CD set. The CD features 14 tracks including 3 bonus tracks. The DVD includes the making of the album and how to play songs from the album featurette. This title carries a parental advisory.
Trivium: Matthew K. Heafy (vocals, guitar); Corey Beaulieu (guitar); Paolo Gregoletto (bass guitar); Travis Smith (drums). Orlando's Trivium has returned with another platter of energetic heavy-metal anthems under the title SHOGUN. Produced by Nick Raskulinecz (Velvet Revolver, Foo Fighters, Shadows Fall), Trivium's fourth studio ...
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