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khaos

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    This has been in my wishlist for ages but not sure if I actually listened to this mix before. The bass is a lot more prominent and better than the original CD...which I assume I still have in the garage. Fun fact, Human was the first CD I ever bought, back in 1992 with some of the money I was supposed to spend on textbooks for Uni.
     
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    I've had Distance Collapsed for years and never realised there was an earlier release. Still not been able to stump up $18 for the old diSEMBOWELMENT album, so this is better value at $6.
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1 hour ago, JonoBlade said:
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Why not? This is one of those bands I go through phases on. I don't have all of their albums and not that bothered by the supposed masterpiece Crack the Skye. I had a renaissance with The Hunter, and big fan of Hushed & Grim, but the older material never particularly resonated. A rare band that, for me, gets better the more they sell out. It doesn't make any goddamned sense.

I have all Mastodon's stuff, seen them a bunch of times. Awesome show every time. This is the album everyone always points too as their best, but I prefer Once More Around the Sun. As a bass player myself, I always have extra appreciation for bands with a solid bass player that also sings. Troy is pretty badass at both. Just picked up the gatefold reissue of this last weekend and it sounds amazingly good to my ears. Better than the CD version.

This will not be the full list I'll pick up for BC Friday. I've missed the last few and have a bunch built up in my wishlist I've been waiting to pick up, and I need to check out some of these you posted.

Black Pyramid | Emperor Guillotine (bandcamp.com)

Covenant of the Blackened Woodlands | Ithilrå (bandcamp.com)

Distorted Romance | EBOLA (bandcamp.com)

Senprūsija | Skyforger (bandcamp.com)

Memories Of A Time To Come | Blind Guardian (bandcamp.com)

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28 minutes ago, navybsn said:

I have all Mastodon's stuff, seen them a bunch of times. Awesome show every time. This is the album everyone always points too as their best, but I prefer Once More Around the Sun. As a bass player myself, I always have extra appreciation for bands with a solid bass player that also sings. Troy is pretty badass at both. Just picked up the gatefold reissue of this last weekend and it sounds amazingly good to my ears. Better than the CD version.

This will not be the full list I'll pick up for BC Friday. I've missed the last few and have a bunch built up in my wishlist I've been waiting to pick up, and I need to check out some of these you posted.

Black Pyramid | Emperor Guillotine (bandcamp.com)

Covenant of the Blackened Woodlands | Ithilrå (bandcamp.com)

Distorted Romance | EBOLA (bandcamp.com)

Senprūsija | Skyforger (bandcamp.com)

Memories Of A Time To Come | Blind Guardian (bandcamp.com)

That's why I like the new stuff most I think. They have three ace vocalists; they all write songs. It's like Queen but without the embarrassing disco phase.

I have only seen them twice; the last with Gojira in Auckland. That was a good night. But I lament having missed the Masties in the early days at a basement bar in London on the Remission tour. Any band is better in a dive bar. I haven't been to a "big" gig in years - not since that Auckland show in fact.

Will check oot some of your recos, except Blind Guardian. I am not ready to strap on the gag ball just yet.

 

 

14 hours ago, AlSymerz said:

Bruce Dickinson - The Mandrake Project

How is it? I've watched a few of the music videos which weren't the best promo tool, but I'd be willing to give it ago. More likely to make it through than Senjitsu. 

...holy shit, it is on bandcamp: The Mandrake Project | Bruce Dickinson (bandcamp.com)

I will cue up next when this Mastodon finishes. It just passed a track which sounded exactly like Call of Ktulu.

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5 minutes ago, JonoBlade said:

Any band is better in a dive bar

This is the truth. The smaller and filthier the venue the better.

5 minutes ago, JonoBlade said:

Blind Guardian. I am not ready to strap on the gag ball just yet.

Just saw them live on the 70K fest. Never thought much of them but holy shit they blew me away. I'm a convert. Helloween used to be the only Power Metal band I really ever listened to, but I can add these guys now. Not something that will be a regular spin, but when the mood strikes.

Now for some appropriate Friday music:

Dead Milkmen - Eat Your Paisley!

 

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10 hours ago, Arioch said:

Nocturnus - The Key (1990)

I've shunned this album for decades. I had buddies who loved it, including one who doesn't really like Death Metal, especially when it's technical or complicated.

But every time I tried The Key, it just wouldn't do. I'd stop within minutes.

It's typically an album that, for me, isn't accessible on the first few listens. It takes a lot more to get into it.

But since then, I've taken the time to dwell on it, listening to it over and over again to immerse myself in it. I wouldn't say it's an album I'd listen to every day, but I like it a lot.

 

That's an interesting take. I love that album and have from the first second I heard it. Maybe part of the reason it's seen so favorably these days is that nobody has any faith in Azagthoth to really bring the Altars of Madness type of material back. This is also one of those where I feel like sometimes internet underlings spend too much time dwelling on the concept and supposed plot that's said to exist in the lyrics. I've never really taken the time to look through the lyrics, and honestly I don't really care to do so. It has always been about what's on display musically for me, and in that respect it holds it's own even all these years later.

NP: House of Atreus - Orations

▶︎ House of Atreus - Orations | Iron Bonehead Productions (bandcamp.com)

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I am unabashedly going to be 'that guy' and note that listing 'shakespearean' on your MA profile under the "themes" section makes you sound like a drooling cretin. They're from Minnesota as well so they have no excuse for that kind of gaffe. It just needed to be said.

Getting back to the music though something about the way they come out of the gate fast and keep everything clear and crisp using folksy black metal tunefulness as a way of resolving their melodies really brings me back to the days when Scandinavian folk was the 'it' thing. Some of these licks would feel right at home on an Ensiferum album from that era. Then as they move along and the folk takes a back seat they change up to a more stark but still energetic mode. Then they keep it up adjusting to whatever style seems to fit the song showing adaptability and intelligence all the way to the Running Wild cover to close things out. Consider me intrigued. I think I'll find one of their full lengths to try and see where they're coming from.

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6 hours ago, JonoBlade said:

How is it? I've watched a few of the music videos which weren't the best promo tool, but I'd be willing to give it ago. More likely to make it through than Senjitsu. 

...holy shit, it is on bandcamp: The Mandrake Project | Bruce Dickinson (bandcamp.com)

I will cue up next when this Mastodon finishes. It just passed a track which sounded exactly like Call of Ktulu.

After only one listen I'm okay with it. There is a lot going on there and given some of the songs are 15 years old they might have taken some polishing to get over the line. There is nothing ground breaking there and he's still very much Iron Maiden's singer so expecting something too much different would be silly. Quite a few people seem to not like the new (old) version of If Eternity Should Fail, but I don't mind it. It's probably over produced, over engineered and terrible sounding to many but I don't mind what I've heard so far. I'll give it another listen and see where I sit.

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14 hours ago, JonoBlade said:

Bandcamp Friday! Get some in ya.

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Found in my wishlist. It was in NZD so I presume a kiwi band, even though writing about Scottish ghosts or something. Sounds decent.

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    Got a few albums by these guys. This must have been from an AOTY list.
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    Why not? This is one of those bands I go through phases on. I don't have all of their albums and not that bothered by the supposed masterpiece Crack the Skye. I had a renaissance with The Hunter, and big fan of Hushed & Grim, but the older material never particularly resonated. A rare band that, for me, gets better the more they sell out. It doesn't make any goddamned sense.

By the way....an observation for @JamesT, the only other person here that would care. Halford's vocals on that new Priest track sound incredible for a 74 year old or whatever he is. The modern Richie-generated generic Priest riff machine still does nothing for me, but vocally it is spot on.  

I appreciate the teaser, my friend!  As is my way, I haven't listened to any of the singles ahead of album #19 from my favorite traditional metal band in history.  I just can't do it, especially as far ahead of the release date as they put out that very first single (back in October).  I'm just not diving into the new material 5 months before the album comes out.  So, for me, the new album will be completely brand new from start to finish, and I cannot wait for next Friday!

I have heard rumblings that Halford hits some notes that are reminiscent of the "Painkiller" days, which I find absolutely mind-boggling, given that he's into his 70's now.  Glad to hear that the rumors are true!  You have filled my metal heart with an even greater level of eager anticipation for "Invincible Shield" - something I didn't think was possible.  I'm indebted to you for that.

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