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Anyways, question for the Winnipeg folks here, know of any good metal shows coming up soon? I (regretfully) missed the Opeth show, so I'm in need of a good metal show to go to soon. Most amazing jew boots
"Tread softly because you tread on my dreams" - W.B. Yeats
Nothing on top but a bucket and a mop and an illustrated book about birds |
Double Post:
Cryptopsy is also playing in TO in april, they are always awesome life as i saw them last year with Suffocation and Aborted and that was a fucking brutal show. FELIPE NO
Last edited by Iwata; Mar 13, 2006 at 07:37 PM.
Reason: Automerged double post.
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The new Arsis tour is only hitting Ottawa, Quebec City, and Hamilton in Canada. Hopefully they head west next time. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body?
Last edited by knkwzrd; Mar 13, 2006 at 08:35 PM.
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I love acoustic guitars in metal. It's great hearing bands that can use both styles of guitar and make it sound to the best of their ability. A lot of metal bands that I have heard (In Flames, Dream Theater, Metallica..ect) all have used acoustic guitars in a lot of their songs, either instrumental parts or whatnot, they all sounded quite amazing.
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
On the acoustic issue, I think that really good acts let the heaviness come across in the writing, and the instrument doesn't matter as much. For instance, jazz trio The Bad Plus cover a few Sabbath tunes, and they are just as heavy when performed by an standup bass, piano and drums as by the original electric fourpiece. It's really shows the strength of the source material. Also, for a complete schooling on how acoustic guitars work in metal, see Candlemass' Epicus Doomicus Metallicus.
How ya doing, buddy? |
You don't like acustic guitar in metal? does this transfer over to piano and such other sounds? I would say those instruments, Piano especially, add so much to metal, which is probably why i like Dream Theater so much. I think it's healthy for a band to do some ballads, or acustic songs, or they end up getting really repetitive and lose me as a member of their audience. EDIT: fixed some spelling stuff cause knkwzrd wouldn't shut up about it. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
Last edited by Helloween; Mar 13, 2006 at 10:00 PM.
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Sweet Arsis is coming to Phoenix with Necrophagist and Alarum. I checked out Alarum and liked what I heard. An interesting jazz/metal fusion band. And Cattle Decapitation just sucks ass.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
Here is the latest Arsis release if anyone's interested.
Arsis - A Diamond for Disease ( 2005, Willowtip, Metal ) Track Listing: 1. A Diamond for Disease 12:52 2. Roses on White Lace 4:17 3. The Promise of Never 2:51 Overview: "The nice part about a full length is that a band has a lot of room to breathe and explore, expand their sound, build a connection to the listener and in some instances, when they hit a rough patch there is the possibility to smooth things over by the next song. An EP on the other hand, there is no time to waste and fans tend to be unforgiving when they shell out cash for usually not a whole lot of new material, since EP's (with a few expceptions) are notorious for throwaways and filler until the next album. Most labels tack on multimedia portions, live cuts, never before seen photos/artwork, everything but the kitchen sink to boost sales. It's nice though when an EP pulls through without all of the glitter and is gold by quality of its content alone, even when running time is not exactly plentiful. Arsis is the band, and "A Diamond For Disease" is such a release. Opening with the unwavering, absolutely stunning title track, Arsis sculpts a sonic masterpiece over 12 plus minutes, weaving through various genres against a strong backdrop of melodic, progressive death/thrash metal. This tune was originally composed for the Ballet Deviare in NYC and if you can get away from the traditional interpretations of the art (as is obvious that particular company does), it's not too difficult to envision this powerful epic syncing up with the delicate but timeless nature of ballet. This one offering justifies the price of the EP, but Arsis doesn't stop there. They rip their way through a cover of "Roses on White Lace" by Alice Cooper and truly make it their own. In recent years, there have been a few metal bands covering Mr. Shock Rocker turned Mr. Pro Golfer (most notably Children Of Bodom) but Arsis blow all contenders away. The final bit of brutal beauty on this gem is "The Promise Of Never" which is under three minutes but packs a lot of punch, and is kind of a nice yin to the raging yang of the the title track. Lyrically, both originals have words of weight and grace, and fit perfectly with the music, as does the artwork. Production is perfect. I don't know what else to say but to use that age old cliche of "this record is amazing" but damnit, it's so true with "A Diamond For Disease." What are you still reading this review for? Go out and buy this bands entire catalog. You won't regret it." Another masterful peice of work from the dudes called Arsis I was speaking idiomatically. |
Going to see Opeth with Dark Tranquillity and Devildriver (ugh) tomorrow. Going to be a great show!
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
About halfway through the set when I saw this show, Dez Fafara tried to start a riot, and all the death metal fans told him to fuck off. It's a good show though overall if Opeth pulls off the same set.
FELIPE NO |
Whoo!
Dream Theater was quite the show. Pictures and information when I can get them developped. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
Whoa, I'm back here at the Metal Thread...
Well... my news (not so 'new' now)... OPETH WILL FINALLY COME TO BRAZIL! (September/October) Damn, I simply can't express how the fukkin hell I was waiting for their show! And in 14th October (Sao Paulo), Live'n'Louder Festival w/ Black Label Society, Saxon, Nevermore, Primal Fear, Gotthard, After Forever... (BLS, Gotthard first visit here) I couldn't imagine this year would be productive here... already played here The Gathering, and there will be Candlemass, Destruction and others... well, I hope I have money for all these concerts Jam it back in, in the dark.
Last edited by JesperStromblad; Mar 15, 2006 at 09:43 AM.
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Hey, the EP was great, Iwata. I hope they expand upon the progressive touches they've shown so far.
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
As much as I loathe and despise both of these fallen hacks of musicians, I feel obliged to repost the speeches Lars Ulrich and James Hetfield made to induct Black fucking Sabbath into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as they are surprisingly good speeches and Black Sabbath alone is worth it:
http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/bla...wsitemID=49600 Respect to the Creators! This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Finally Sabbath gets the induction they deserve. And Blabbermouth posters are still fucking pussies.
Anyway, got back from an insanely awesome Opeth show! Dark Tranquillity opened up quite nicely with some songs from Damage Done, Character and a couple of their older albums. Good musicianship and good stage presence. I certainly can't complain, and I would like to see them again. Devil Driver, whom I saw before with Opeth before, was on next. Jesus. If you put five human sized turds on stage, slapped them with instruments, I wouldn't know the difference. Devildriver is just a generic cash-in on the American metalcore craze. Dez was a cock gobbler for Coal Chamber and now he's an ass muncher in addition to his cock gobbliness. The riffs were overly repetitive and forgetable. Each song started with the same build up riff, verse, breakdown, the occasional pseudo solo, breakdown, breakdown and end. All the songs sounded the same and was incredibly boring. Good thing Opeth brightened up the show. Opeth opened up with Ghost of Perdition and followed up with White Cluster. Mikael Adkerfeldt did a good job getting the crowd going, even adding a little humor, such as making the claim he wears a wig that's why he doesn't headbang much. They performed the Amen Corner, which was awesome to hear. I love the album version and the live version was just as awesome. Next I believe was Closure from Damnation which had a cool extended solo session before the ending motif. They performed a song from Orchid, Under the Weeping Moon, which while I enjoy on the album was so much better live. The next three songs were The Baying of the Hounds, The Grand Conjuration and The Drapery Falls. They performed an encore, after Mikael quizzed us on rock riff knowledge which was Deliverance. Overall I enjoyed the set quite a bit. I was pleased with some of the older and lesser played live songs. However, I do wish they picked something else from Blackwater Park since they play the Drapery Falls all the time. I would've loved to hear Bleak live. Either, a very solid live show and one of my tops so far. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I always refrain from reading the posts at Blabbermouth, because I don't want my IQ to suddenly drop at alarming rates.
I was speaking idiomatically. |
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
So, like, have Sabbath been overlooked all this while?
Also, totally not metal but lol @ the Pistols. FELIPE NO |
No but it was about damn time they were inducted into any hall of fame, really.
Just got those from the used CD stores: Queensrÿche - s/t (for a whooping 7$ CAD) and Samael - Blood Ritual (original, not re-issue, I hope that's rare.. hehe). What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
Anyone ever seen the movie "Rock n' Roll Nightmare" featuring Vancouver metal legend Thor? That's right, Jan-Mikl Thor, lead singer of Thor, who bent metal bars clenched in his teeth on stage. I've heard some awful reviews and some so-awful-it-kicked-ass reviews. It's long out of print, so getting myself a copy isn't much of an option.
On a side note, check out Thor's Only The Strong. One of the greatest metal albums of the eighties. "Let The Blood Run Red", indeed. Jam it back in, in the dark. |
Never seen it, but I'm interested in the new metal documentary that's supposed to come out on DVD in a few months. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
Yeah I've heard about that. A theater here is actually giving it a run, supposedly.
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Heh, I remember the first time I heard of Devildriver. My friend made me listen to it, he said "DOOD THIS IS AWESOME SHIT", so I gave it a listen and after a few songs, I was like "LOL". Although I told him "yeah it's good" cause I don't want to offend him since while we were listening he was like banging his head in the air. Oh, this is the same friend who said it was kinda scary listening to Finntroll's music... WTF man.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
You either need to get new friends or stop humoring him. I was speaking idiomatically. |
For sure, I have friends that listen to, get this, FALLOUT BOY, *cocks gun*, except I tell them what I think...
*Goes out to pop a cap* What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
"Tread softly because you tread on my dreams" - W.B. Yeats
Nothing on top but a bucket and a mop and an illustrated book about birds |
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