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What Are You Listening To?


khaos

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55 minutes ago, Thatguy said:

 

All the aspects that put you off make this appeal to me, but the trouble is indeed that it is too long - dipping in will not easily give a representative sample and I don't want to waste 120 minutes either. 

Yeah. I made a go of it, and there were some cool ideas, but just not even close to enough to justify the pure time investment. Who knows, maybe I quit before things got good, but you can't spread that little bit of butter over an entire loaf of bread and call it a meal.

NP: Helgrind - Rusalka 7"

▶︎ HELGRIND (CUBA) - RUSALKA 7" | MASTERS OF KAOS (bandcamp.com)

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Very Euro sounding black metal. Not what I was expecting at all from apparently a Cuban band.

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50 minutes ago, AlSymerz said:

Nirvana's In Utero is getting a 30 year anniversary release this year, it apparently has 52 tracks on it. I didn't know Nirvana had 52 songs.

Those extra songs are probably just demos and live versions - the usual pointless fillers.

They did apparently have 102 songs though that list does contain a few covers.

 

https://au.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/no-apologies-all-102-nirvana-songs-ranked-626/

 

Nirvana - Incesticide - for a compilation of B-sides this is quite a surprisingly coherent release.  Again some great alternative rock.

 

In a real nostalgic mood.  I miss being young and I miss the 1990s music scene!

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I don't really know that much about Nirvana. I know their radio songs, but beyond that I have very little idea. A mate of mine borrowed Hormoaning from the video shop and kept it because paying the fine for loosing the CD was cheaper than trying to find it in store once it sold it's initial print run. I listened to that, but nothing else.

 

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38 minutes ago, AlSymerz said:

I don't really know that much about Nirvana. I know their radio songs, but beyond that I have very little idea. A mate of mine borrowed Hormoaning from the video shop and kept it because paying the fine for loosing the CD was cheaper than trying to find it in store once it sold it's initial print run. I listened to that, but nothing else.

 

That's fair enough.  Used to be hard getting anything in back in the 1990s and early 2000s!

I listened to Nirvana a fair bit when I was a teenager, dropped off in late teens but then got back into them in 2010s after I had remembered there was music other than metal.

Crowbar - Crowbar

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1 hour ago, SurgicalBrute said:

Commuted - The Obsession with Lessening Death

U.S. blackened death...flirts a bit with war metal at times

https://commuted666.bandcamp.com/album/the-obsession-with-lessening-death

Fuck...this ain't half-bad.

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I dig the cover. Clicked the link and it hooked me in all of about three seconds. Nice find.

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Black Tooth - "Drink Drive Go to Hell"

Some really good groove metal!  

Accept - "Blind Rage"

The Mark Tornillo-era is my favorite Accept material by far, but this album was the one that took more time to grow on me.  It's a bit different from the other 4 albums with Mark thus far, but I absolutely love it now.  Tracks like "Dying Breed", "Trail of Tears", "200 Years", and "Final Journey" are just killer. 

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4 hours ago, Arioch said:

Bal-Sagoth - Battle Magic (1998)

 

Been on a bit of a kick with these guys lately, huh? Me too. I was always aware of them and had maybe heard a few songs here and there, but I never realized until this year just how much excellent material they have. For some reason I thought they had a largely spurned semi-metal phase somewhere back in their catalogue, but if they did I haven't found it yet. Seems like these guys have been holding the euro-style power metal banner for a long time now. Good to have something to interrupt my frequent forays into the Falconer catalogue as far as that goes.

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NP: Acolyte - Alta

▶︎ Alta | Acolyte | Mordgrimm (bandcamp.com)

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Starting today with an older album I remember enjoying, but never really worked back to for various time/work/real life related reasons. Back when this dropped and we didn't know what we were dealing with in the whole dissonant black/death thing, and Deathspell Omega still had a little mystique surrounding their music and anything you could do to link your band with them was likely going to be good for marketing, a ton of albums like this one (that I would definitely classify in the more progressive bm category as oppossed to the dissonant DSOs of the scene) tried to slide in under that weird and then undefined umbrella. This is also where you get Ulver fully transformed into weird and off the wall territory and labels like Southern Lord rereleasing some obscure monsters I hadn't had access to prior, but also pushing strange stuff like Boris that was arguably not metal. Weird times. I do remember this album being part of the more unassuming group of bm albums out there that came off as just some guys playing music they liked wherever it happened to fall in the genre chart. That quality still carries through listening to it now. Not mind-blowing or anything like that, but a rock solid contribution to metal at large.

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