| | As I Lay Dying Frail Words Collaspe CD As I Lay Dying Discography of CDs
(28 Customer Reviews)
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As I Lay Dying: Tim Lambesis (vocals); Evan White, Jasun Krebs (guitar); Aaron Kennedy (bass); Jordan Mancino (drums). Recorded in February 2003. Personnel: Tim Lambesis (vocals); Evan White (guitar). Audio Mixer: Steve Russell. Recording information: Big Fish Studio (02/2003). As I Lay Dying is one of many, many bands to throw their hat into the Swedish-influenced metal-hardcore ring in the early 2000s, joining fellow metal-label signees as God Forbid and Shadows Fall (Century Media) and Killswitch Engage (Roadrunner). Frail Words Collapse is a solid example of its genre, carrying the stereotypical hallmarks of harmonized dual-guitar riffing (often reminiscent of In Flames or Iron Maiden), heavy double-bass drumming, and roaring vocals that occasionally slip into a melodic, clean-voiced emo style. There are also a few more dissonant, "technical" passages that nod toward Converge and their ilk. The songs here are solid enough and well executed, and the production is adequate (if a little too clean and digital sounding). This album will appeal mostly to devoted fans of the genre who are looking for another slight variation on the In Flames-influenced metal-hardcore style. ~ William York As I Lay Dying is one of many, many bands to throw their hat into the Swedish-influenced metal-hardcore ring in the early 2000s, joining fellow metal-label signees as God Forbid and Shadows Fall (Century Media) and Killswitch Engage (Roadrunner), among many others. Frail Words Collapse is a solid example of its genre, carrying the stereotypical hallmarks of harmonized dual-guitar riffing (often reminiscent of In Flames or Iron Maiden), heavy double-bass drumming, and roaring vocals that occasionally slip into a melodic, clean-voiced emo style. There are also a few more dissonant, "technical" passages that nod toward Converge and their ilk. While not an obvious clone of any other specific band, As I Lay Dying doesn't really add anything new to the mix from a musical standpoint. Then again, the songs here are solid enough and well executed, and the production is adequate (if a little too clean and digital sounding). This album will appeal mostly to devoted fans of the genre who are looking for another slight variation on the In Flames-influenced metal-hardcore style. ~ William YorkCMJ (6/30/03, p.28) - "...AILD is the perfect example of a Hellfest type band, and FRAIL WORDS COLLAPSE is a metal mutation of Eurometal and metalcore..." Frail Words Collaspe Music As I Lay Dying Frail Words Collaspe Songs Frail Words Collaspe Music Review Buy Frail Words Collaspe CD Purchase Frail Words Collaspe CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Sammy Hagar I Never Said Goodbye CD (1987)
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| | Here Come The Tears CD (2005) Import
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$20.95 Few rock & roll breakups have been as plain nasty as Bernard Butler leaving Suede during the final stages of recording their second album, Dog Man Star, in 1994. The guitarist departed abruptly, leaving Butler's co-songwriter, vocalist Brett Anderson, to finish the epic sophomore effort; Anderson was even forced to lay down guitar parts Butler left unrecorded. The bad blood flowed throughout the pages of NME and Melody Maker, with Anderson hiring youthful Butler look-alike Richard Oakes as his replacement guitarist right before the gothic, grandiose epic did a commercial swan dive during the height of hedonistic Britpop. Anderson picked up the pieces by doing a deliberate 180 from Dog Man Star with 1997's Coming Up, a trashy, fizzy piece of neo-glam that brought Suede to the top of the charts, just after Butler's project with neo-soul vocalist David McAlmont imploded and just before the guitarist launched a solo career comprised of two densely indulgent albums. As Butler was pursuing his whims, Anderson kept Suede churning out explicit sequels to Coming Up before the band collapsed in a tired heap of addiction and fatigue after the release of 2002's New Morning. That album appeared a month after Butler's good but roundly ignored reunion with McAlmont, meaning that by the end of 2002, both men were free to pursue new projects -- or revive old alliances as the case may be, since Anderson and Butler buried the hatchet in 2004 and formed a new band, the Tears, releasing its debut album, Here Come the Tears, in the summer of 2005. There's nothing shocking about Here Come the Tears, apart from the fact that it's the rare reunion album that truly does complete some unfinished business. Instead of delving back into the doomed darkness of Dog Man Star, Anderson and Butler go about the process of creating a proper sequel to that underappreciated masterpiece. Consequently, Here Come the Tears is what Coming Up would have been if Butler had stuck around: it's cinematic ...
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