Cover of Foo Fighters Concrete And Gold
Seamus1804

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For foo fighters fans,mainstream rock lovers,listeners of modern rock anthems,music review readers,rock album collectors
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THE REVIEW

The Foo Fighters are a great band. Because they play brilliantly and, even if they perform mainstream rock, they do so with an almost unique credibility in today's scene.
However, they are essentially a Greatest Hits band, because when they nail a great song, where power and melody perfectly merge to create modern 'anthems', there's no one that can match them. But, not being particularly innovative, they often fail to maintain constant inspiration and tension throughout an album.
This work is no exception, alternating some excellent rock tracks, gritty and vibrant, with others that are, all things considered, superfluous in their discography. There are also some good ballads, but the impression is that the fillers confine the album to that ' aurea mediocritas' that one could do without in the end.

Decent but forgettable. Dispensable.

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Summary by Bot

The review praises Foo Fighters' ability to craft powerful modern anthems with strong melody. However, the album alternates between excellent tracks and less inspiring fillers. While some ballads are good, the presence of superfluous songs leaves the album feeling decent but ultimately forgettable and dispensable.

Tracklist

01   T-Shirt (01:23)

02   The Line (03:38)

03   Concrete And Gold (55:31)

04   Run (05:23)

05   Make It Right (04:39)

06   The Sky Is A Neighborhood (04:05)

07   La Dee Da (04:03)

08   Dirty Water (05:21)

09   Arrows (04:26)

10   Happy Ever After (Zero Hour) (03:41)

11   Sunday Rain (06:11)

Foo Fighters

American rock band formed by Dave Grohl in 1994 after his time in Nirvana; known for blending alternative rock and post-grunge and for large-scale live shows.
32 Reviews

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By GrantNicholas

 Dave Grohl has described the new, ninth studio album of his Foo Fighters as 'Motorhead doing Sgt. Pepper.'

 'Happy Ever After (Zero Hour)' is the real gem of the album, a quiet and Beatles-esque number that seems like it came from a late sixties record.