NeKro

DeRank : 0,42
DeAge™ : 7285 days • Here since 29 june 2006
Bloodbath Nightmares Made Flesh
Voto:
Incomprehensible are the reasons that lead some record labels to produce anonymous albums like this one, which I believe are nothing more than the outpourings from the basement of artists who don't want to leave their homes because they are tired of playing on the PlayStation. Of course, the artists involved in the project have given and are giving a lot to the scene and deserve respect for that, but there are other pastimes...
Entombed Wolverine Blues
Voto:
My favorite album by Entombed, where their death metal (Swedish) heritage meets the drummer Nicke Andersson's love for rock (the band's main composer), who would later form The Hellacopters. Among the subsequent albums, I believe Uprising is the best. Live, they are still as rowdy and filthy as pigs in the mud.
Aborti Mancati 1989-1994:Lustro Di Merda
Voto:
Mythical Abortions
Swarm Of The Lotus The Sirens Of Silence
Voto:
I don't know the album, but I have a question: wasn't sludge the genre of Crowbar, Soilent Green, and Eyehategod? Aren't Neurosis and Isis (the very authors of Panopticon) more in line with the styles of post-hardcore? Nice review.
Yakuza Samsara
Yakuza Samsara
5 sep 06
Voto:
Very nice album, a further step forward compared to the debut.
Nevermore The Politics Of Ecstasy
Voto:
Perhaps the most challenging album by Nevermore, more complex in its structures compared to the debut and more intricate and "twisted" than the subsequent releases. Up until a couple of years ago, they were a great band live, but the last two times I saw them perform were quite disappointing. That said, a bad album by Nevermore (even though they’ve never made one) is still far superior to the average of today's record releases.
Feeder Echo Park
Voto:
If the Feeder are good, we’re all set... then Simone, who supports Vasco, is good too.
Feeder Echo Park
Voto:
Mediocre album. A group of highly recommended freeloaders (otherwise, their role as the opening act for U2 and the Rolling Stones wouldn’t make sense).
Static-x Start A War
Voto:
Inferior to "Wysconsin Deathtrip" in its freshness and brutality, while the album in question has a somewhat bland flavor, giving off the impression of being a calculated effort. Nevertheless, it remains a group above average, having found its path in modern metal (I've always considered them to be like Fear Factory with drier and sharper sounds), compared to mere clones of Korn and their ilk. With Shadow Zone, however, they affiliated themselves with the Nu-Metal caravan where several tracks resemble the latter part of Korn's discography.
Ill Niño One Nation Underground
Voto:
From the review, it seems that there is no consideration that the album in question is the third, and it is definitely more traditionally metal compared to "Revolution/Revolucion" and "Confession," as this album draws from the lessons taught by Pantera ("Far Beyond Driven" docet), becoming more brutal and losing a good portion of the Latin influences present in the debut and the second album. Nevertheless, it’s an excellent modern and solid metal album, which shines even more live (I've seen them live twice and they are a force of nature ... far from Soulfly).