Showing posts with label new. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new. Show all posts

Armistice Review

Armistice
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Sophomore albums are like sequels to great movies. At first you get excited about the prospect of seeing all your favorite beloved characters again. Then you become apprehensive. A thought pops into your head. "The Empire is striking back? Sweet!" Then another. "There's going to be a female Terminator?! Ah, crap!"
Mutemath's latest CD had me saying both. Their first, self-titled, album was nearly flawless. It has yet to leave my CD player. And when it does, it'll be a cold day in hell. So as I frolicked out of Hoodlum's with the CD in my hands, I thought to myself, "Wait... what if they can't do any better than that first album?"
So I set the mood for a fresh listen. I waiting until the evening, rolled the windows of my car down, lit some candles, poured a glass of wine, put on some smooth jazz (then took it off realizing how difficult it would be to hear two CDs at once), and slid Armistice by Mutemath into the CD player.
I was ready to rock. That was my first problem. I was initially let down. This was not the Mutemath I had fallen in love with. There were no catchy riffs, no loud, impassioned vocals, and no instrumental experiments.
But one day, upon my fourth or fifth listen with Armistice in the background, I got it. In a musical epiphany, I realized just how much soul these boys from New Orleans have. You can't rock to this album. You have to get down to it. That can be done with a little less head movement and a little more pelvis.
I realized that Mutemath was able to accomplish one thing twice. They were able to create a fresh album.


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Anointed by Alternative Press as 'the #1 band you need to see live before you die,' eclectic and inspired electro-alt MUTEMATH scored in late 2008 with 'Spotlight' (#1 Billboard Hot Singles Sales for two weeks) on the soundtrack album to Twilight. The track now also appears on the group's second album, Armistice. Produced by Dennis Herring (Modest Mouse, Elvis Costello, The Hives), Armistice melds moments of beauty with big hooks and booming vocals. Challenging the limitations of alt-rock, MUTEMATH has rightly earned a reputation as one of modern music's most daring young groups.

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Songs From The Sparkle Lounge Review

Songs From The Sparkle Lounge
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after listening to five of the new album "songs from the Sparkle Lounge",
i would have to say for the first time in a long long time def leppard got back the heavy guitar riffs and harmony that made male and even female fans remember the glory days of old when High N Dry was hot and Pyromania was king. I dont know how or what woke the band up, but they sound heavy.It is like Steve Clark is there along with original band mate Pete Willis of course not in form but in spirit. The Song "Go" is awesome! "Gotta Let it Go" is another great tune as is "Come Undone"."Bad Actress" has some feel to Hysteria or Pyromania days. I also think Leppard used some AC/DC sound ..that was well know from their 70s days like "Powerage", or "Let there be Rock" or even "Highway to Hell"-just the riffs i am speaking about. "Nine Lives" is also a cool track. "Hallucinate" sounds smooth just the beginning has that AC/DC sound as well as "Tomorrow". You be the judge. Take it from me a old-time Leppard fan, I think the boys got a hit album.

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BAND RETURNS WITH BRAND NEW STUDIO ALBUM"SONGS FROM THE SPARKLE LOUNGE" SET FOR RELEASE ON APRIL 29Album Release Kicks Off With U.S. Spring Concert Tour!Album Contains 11 NEW Original Songs Including the Single"Nine Lives" Featuring Tim McGraw Def Leppard, Great Britain's premiere arena rock band, is back with a bang--kicking off 2008 with the release of their 14th studio album and a U.S. arena concert tour scheduled for this spring. Entitled Songs From The Sparkle Lounge (Bludgeon Riffola/Island/UMe), the album contains 11 new songs including the highly-anticipated single "Nine Lives" featuring a groundbreaking collaboration with country music superstar Tim McGraw. Songs From The Sparkle Lounge is Def Leppard's first album of brand new material since 2002's X and begins yet another remarkable new chapter in the band's 30-year recording career.Recorded last year during month-long stints at lead singer Joe Elliott's Dublin studio, the album's title refers to a backstage area called "The Sparkle Lounge" on Def Leppard's 2006 tour where the band would go to write songs. Tracks from the album have been described by the group as written in the style of Hysteria, with the production of High 'n' Dry. "The whole record's got a great '70s feel," said lead singer Joe Elliott. "By our standards, it's a very different album as we've been very adventurous, musically, on certain numbers. On the album there are classic Def Leppard songs and then there's also tracks that are very new-wave influenced while others sound like middle-to-late '70s AC/DC. There will definitely be some moments on it where anybody that's familiar with our music will go, 'Whoa! I wasn't expecting that!'"The foundation for the album's collaboration with country music superstar Tim McGraw was layed at Def Leppard's 2006 Hollywood Bowl show where McGraw joined the band on stage for an encore performance of "Pour Some Sugar on Me." The artists stayed in touch following the performance, and when the band started writing the song "Nine Lives" they immediately thought of reaching out to McGraw to sing on it. Guitarist Phil Collen flew to Nashville to play it for McGraw who loved it and recorded the song in Nashville shortly after. Other standout tracks on the album include "Go," reminiscent of the band's classic track "Rocket" in its power and aggressive tribal beat; "Love," an emotive and moving epic song; and the anthemic "Tomorrow," a song written by guitarist Collen about the death of his father. With more than 65 million albums sold worldwide and two prestigious Diamond Awards to their credit, Def Leppard--Joe Elliott (vocals), Vivian Campbell (guitar), Phil Collen (guitar), Rick "Sav" Savage (bass) and Rick Allen (drums)--continues to be one of the most important forces in rock music. Over the course of their career, the band has produced a series of classic groundbreaking albums that set the sound for generations of music fans and artists. The group's spectacular live shows, filled with powerful melodic rock anthems, have become synonymous with their name and they are an institution in the touring industry as they continue to sell out arenas worldwide.

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The Oracle Review

The Oracle
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Just got the Deluxe version with CD. As for the music...well I liked their first three albums and this is somewhat closer to those than their last release. However, it is sure not a 100% return to form; more of a 60% return maybe. Have to listen to it more obviously but so far highlights include basically the four first tracks. I was actually pretty impressed with Love Hate Sex Pain, heavy and haunting. Bad news though the middle of the disk seems quite average at first listen.
What you REALLY NEED TO KNOW right now is this: Do not buy the Deluxe version. The DVD is not very interesting. Also, inexplicably, the bonus songs are ON THE DVD! Just unbelievable. So if you think you are getting Whiskey Hangover as part of the CD to listen to, that is not the case. The description for the item is a little unclear about this, and I thought there's no way they were that stupid. Well, they are. The bonus songs are part of the DVD only, which makes them not real useful for listening to on a CD player or Ipod or what have you. Highly recommend you buy the cheaper version and then perhaps download the couple songs individually. Now you know.

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This Deluxe Edition includes a 30 minute Bonus DVD.The upcoming album arrives as the most anticipated 2010 rock release, so far. The debut single from the 10 song disc, "Cryin' Like A Bitch," is already blowing the doors off rock radio and the digital domain, furthering the Boston Band's record-breaking streak at the coveted Active Rock format. The punishing anthem, which debuted a mere three weeks ago as the most added new Active Rock single of the year, has already blazed to the Top 5 tier of the chart. "Cryin' Like A Bitch" is the 15th Top Five hit for the group, more than franchise artists such as Linkin Park, Foo Fighters, and others. It also marks Godsmack's record-breaking 18th Top 10 single of their career, extending their dominance as creators of the most Top 10 hits in Active rock history. Produced by Dave Fortman, who has worked with Mudvayne, Evanescence, and Simple Plan, among others, The Oracle is another lyrical and musical touchstone for the four member band. The new album revels in Godsmack's scorching underpinnings, served up via frontman Sully Erna's monster-vocals on the scathing new single, "Cryin' Like A Bitch," and other songs, including "Saints And Sinners," "War And Peace," "Devil's Swing," and "Good Day To Die." The Oracle is the band's first studio album since 2006's Godsmack IV, another platinum-plus trailblazer for the group, debuting at #1 on the Billboard Top albums chart (their 2nd #1 debut following 2003's Faceless) and harking back to the signature sound of multiplatinum masterpieces like their 5 million selling breakthrough debut album and 2000's AwakeConsidered one of the definitive alternative hard rock bands in contemporary music, The band's 12 year legacy - guided by fearless founder and frontman Sully Erna, includes nearly 15 million albums sold - highlighted by scores of sold-out international concerts, countless successful tours, a remarkable 18 hit singles, 4 platinum records, 1 gold EP and three Grammy nominations.

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Rock Dust Light Star Review

Rock Dust Light Star
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In the last several years before this long awaited 'creative' effort, JK (like many other artists) has spent (& lost) lots of his energy fighting his previous record label (Sony) for more artistic control.
Now that he is freed from the evil tyrants (that made him a star) & been fully granted all the control he'd seek, it is quite aggravating, brutal even, to witness the lack of creativity presented here. Sadly for any music lover & even sadder for any true fan, five years in the waiting, what you get here is a mismatched, uninspired, time-filling, disconnected mixture of what could have barely graced b-sides of his past-life singles.
Be-side (pun intended) 'White Knuckle Ride', an uplifting & infectiously effective 'disco-electro' classic JK track (that I suspect, as it is so far off the rest of the album, was destined for a previously unreleased effort), there isn't anything quite aurally spectacular anymore about Jamiroquai's music. The writing is rather futile (compared to his usually intricate lyrics), the arrangements are repetitive & uninspired, the melodies are, for the most part, weak & fast forgotten. Even the self-loathing cover of the record suggest he's over the hill or well on his way there.
When JK was in his prime, the Buffalo Man was often used to distance his pretty looks from his art. And since the art was so incredibly good, one couldn't care less that no pics were found inside the booklets. One would focus on the groovy music & luscious, deliriously vintage arrangements instead. If there was a time I wished the B-Man was dusted off & put back to use on a cover, it has to be on this one. JK looks almost ridiculous. Even his facial expression seems to suggest: 'Don't I look silly?'
Don't get me wrong: I simply adore & respect this artist, i really do. Jamiroquai (Jay Kay) is a master at what he does. A skilled producer, a (usually very) inspired & inspiring writer surrounded by great, almost surreal musicians / vocalists. But let's be frank, if Jamiroquai was still under Sony's management, this record would have NEVER been released.
Stupendously, tyrannous record companies will often protect artists from attempting to release any crap they make, especially when they're so full of themselves to think ANY of their offering is good enough to go platinum. This was, several years ago, why JK got out of Sony, yet this is exactly one of those moments when a higher power should have stopped this mess from happening.
I am now 15$ shorter & terribly sad to admit that this album has only one undeniable quality: It makes ALL its predecessors scream genius, virtuosity & talent. This ain't no Dynamite, this ain't no Cowboy, no Synkronized... Nope.
Very rare are the artists that have actually been able to produce succesful, quality records after the epitaphic 'greatest hits' collection of their past successes. I am afraid there will never be a 'High Times' part 2.
'Pressure, it gets ya'. Nicely put JK, nicely put.

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2010 release, the seventh album from British Jazz Funk pioneers Jamiroquai. Fronted by the charismatic Jay Kay, this is the band's first album in five years, following Dynamite with the kind of catchiness that made Jamiroquai a household name. Recorded between Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Thailand, Rock Dust Light Star features the single 'Blue Skies', a Take That-esque uplifting pop song - a departure from tracks such as 'Space Cowboy'. This record shows the group's talent remains as strong in 2010 as it was in 1994.

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Trunk Muzik 0 to 60 Review

Trunk Muzik 0 to 60
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Yelawolf has had lots of hype since his verses on Big Boi's "You Ain't No DJ" (which Yelawolf performed live at the 2010 BET Hip-Hop Awards with Big Boi) as well as appearing on the Rock the Bells tour in 2010. His debut effort, which is really more like an EP than an LP (with 6 new songs and 6 remastered songs from his underground mixtape, "Trunk Muzik") is a great intro to Yelawolf. However, this record could've been a little bit better considering how talented a rapper Yelawolf is. I don't find the music and beats to be that great, but Yelawolf elevates these tracks with his incredible flow. One of this release's weak points lies in the rock-based tracks. There are only 2 songs on this album that are rock-based tracks, but they are clearly tracks that I usually skip. Like the opening track, "Get the **** Up", which has Yelawolf screaming the chorus, almost sounding like an old-school Kid Rock song. Once he starts rhyming though, Yelawolf is undeniable. His skill elevates this album, which I think he deserves a lot of credit for. He has a specific southern flow and an instantly recognizable voice. He never slips when it comes to rhyming. Some of these new tracks are pretty good, like "Daddy's Lambo" and "That's What We On Now". The best tracks on the release however are the remastered cuts from the original bootleg mixtape. The strongest song on the album, in my opinion, is the closing track "Trunk Muzik". Yelawolf completely tears this song apart and reveals his awesome lyrical prowess. Other choice nuggs include, "Pop the Trunk", a hardcore shotgun-toting anthem, "I Wish" featuring Raekwon, and "Box Chevy" featuring Ritz the Rapper. You really have to listen to his rhyming to appreciate his skill. The music on the release is a little sub-par if you ask me, but this guy shows a lot of promise for the future and I would recommend this record to fans of hardcore southern hip-hop. Yelawolf is about as southern as rappers come, and he is not shy about it whatsoever. Don't sleep on Yelawolf, he's signed to Interscope and we can expect big things from him in the future. Overall, he's off to a good start, and I give this album 3.5 stars.
***UPDATE*** - 1 / 13 / 11 - Yelawolf has just been signed to Shady Records. That label is a perfect fit for him and I'm excited about it. Now we can REALLY count on an exciting future for Yelawolf.

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Envision a humid world of slow-rolling Monte Carlos and slaughter houses; meth labs and rusting Mossberg's, inked up arms and haircuts that look like they've been chopped by hatchets. Trunk Muzik.Southern Pine trees, smoking pine, and pine boxes. Call him Catfish Billy or Yelawolf, just don't go make him go pop the trunk on you. Enter Yelawolf's Alabama--a backwoods badlands of sinners and salvation. He claims Gadsden, but he's from everywhere. Born Michael Wayne Atha to an absentee father and a bartender mother, he attended over 15 schools while soaking up slang and spiritualism in Baton Rouge, Antioch, Tennessee, and Atlanta. While trying to stay afloat in a turbulent home life addled by drug and alcohol abuse, he discovered rap music in Tennesee and it soon became an obsession, along with the classic rock (Lynard Skynard, Pink Floyd, The Allman Brothers) that he was raised on."When I lived in Antioch, they'd bus us down to the projects in Nashville to go to school and everything just started clicking with me with rap music and in life," Yelawolf said. "I felt the connection, these kids had the same problems that I had at home. And the weed, the dope..."His music is a new strain of soul food, the traditional Southern cuisine that fortified the Dungeon Family, 8ball & MJG, and UGK, but infused by Yela's unique experiences as a cross-country vagabond with no place to call home. And, of course, his unparalleled ability to snap off double-timed staccato raps unlike anything you've ever heard. His manager bestowed him with the nickname Joe Dirt because his experiences are so unbelievable. There was the stint commercial fishing in Alaska. An attempt to become a professional skateboarder in Berkeley thwarted by various injuries. Time spent in Seattle and New York, and of course, spots all over the South. The cross-country Greyhound tours around the country like a modern-day Jack Kerouac with the rhyme skills of LL Cool J circa the "Jack the Ripper" era. Finally settling back down in Gadsden, Yelawolf hooked up with Gheto-O-Vision, who helped him land a deal with Columbia in 2007. Suddenly, the last 20 years of life as a vagabond seemed to be at an end. Yet the perpetual state of chaos soon re-emerged, when Rick Rubin took over the label and started cutting artists left and right. Before he had the opportunity to even finish his debut album or prove himself on a large scale, he was unceremoniously dropped."It was frustrating. I was just like, `you don't get it? Alright, that's cool, then I guess I'm extra special," Yelawolf said. "I had to be arrogant because I could have been f**ked up. I mean, Rick Rubin didn't like me? But that's just not my style. I refuse to quit."The only solution was to go harder, taking his anger at being slighted and turning it into something undeniable.He dropped a flurry of mixtapes, including "Stereo," which found him riffing on old classic rock cuts from Fleetwood Mac to Pink Floyd to Heart. But while he continued to build a fan base with each release, something was missing."Not everybody in hip-hop messes with classic rock.There was no real element of surprise. I'm from Alabama, I'm into classic rock -- it was obvious and there was no shock-value to it," Yelawolf said. "After that, I wanted to focus on making sure that people understood that I respected the craft. "Trunk Muzik" was dedicated to the trunk riders, with 808s and hard ass music. It had a dirty Southern sound, and it opened things up.Which is something of an understatement. "Trunk Muzik" dropped on January 1st, 2010, and within a matter of weeks, he was the toast of every blog. The New York Times raved about a live performance, describing him as "fully ascendant" and "striking and assured." The LA Times declared he was "as safe a bet for stardom as anyone out right now -- the rare rapper capable of earning respect from both Kid Rock and Kid Cudi fans." His insanely energetic performances at SXSW were the stuff of instant-legend. Songs like "I Wish" and "Good to Go" found Yela capable of going toe to toe with lyrical giants Bun B and Raekwon. While "Pop the Trunk" epitomized his 808-heavy trunk rattling sound, full of vivid pictures of rural redneck life and violence lurking around every bend. But Interscope didn't just offer him a deal only to tell stories about the South. There are a million rappers capable of doing just that. But none of them can match Yelawolf's versatility. Whether he's rapping over the beat for Cypress Hill's "Ain't Goin' Out Like That," Gucci Mane's "Lemonade," or The Doors' "Waiting for the Sun," Yela has the ability to adapt his style to each song.He doesn't kick 48-bar freestyles, he re-interprets the song to fit a new meaning. He can spit with the most lyrical underground types or he can write an upbeat party anthem like "I Just Wanna Party," alongside Gucci Mane."I can go any direction - arena rap or even the bluegrass hip-hop s**t. I would never sign myself down to any style," Yelawolf said. "I'm always gonna have the darker edgy music - it is always in my pocket because it comes so natural to me. You'll never stop getting records like "Pop the Trunk" or "Good to Go" - the crunk south stuff. It will always be a part of what I do in some way. But I plan on evolving. You have to. I'm out to make long lasting records."

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My World 2.0 Review

My World 2.0
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Look, I think some products should be reviewed from the perspective of a kid not an adult and this is certainly one of them. Our 9y/o daughter loves JB and will be so excited to get this on x-mas. She listens to his songs on demand and at her friends houses. As parents we may not like his songs or may think his lyrics are silly singing about love at 16. However, when I was a kid it was New Kids, N Sync, and Backstreet Boys. So try to put your self in your kids shoes when reading the reviews for this album. It's marketed for tweens and teens not for adults. His songs are up beat and catchy which is why the kids love it. The price is fair as well. If you have a teen or tween who is a JB fan then get this, I am sure they'll love it.

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Teen Island star Justin Bieber's newest single, "Baby" featuring Ludacris is the newest single from his forthcoming album, MY WORLD 2.0. Justin just appeared at the 52nd annual Grammy Awards telecast on CBS-TV and joined fellow Def Jam artist Rihanna and an all-star cast of NFL players at the Pepsi Super Bowl Fan Jam LIVE concert in South Beach televised on VH1. MY WORLD (released November 17th) crossed the RIAA platinum plateau in just seven weeks, for U.S. sales in excess of 1 million units.The album contains his premiere quartet of Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 hits, "One Time" (certified RIAA platinum), "One Less Lonely Girl," "Love Me," and "Favorite Girl."Justin is the first solo artist in history to send four songs from a debut album into the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 prior to his album's release. Now plans call for MY WORLD 2.0 to be issued on March 23rd."Baby" is the first new track to be released from that upcoming CD.Meanwhile, Justin has surpassed 100 million YouTube.com video views (the first 50 million of them as an amateur starting in 2007, posting renditions of his favorite hip-hop and R&B songs).Born in Stratford, Ontario, Justin Bieber is a multi-talented pop/soul singer, and a self-taught musician on drums, guitar, piano, and trumpet.His manager Scooter Braun intro¬duced Justin to the music industry in Atlanta two years ago.There he met multi-platinum superstar Usher, who signed the 13 year-old to his first professional deal and formed the RBMG joint-venture label with Braun and Antonio `L.A.' Reid, Chairman, Island Def Jam Music Group.

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