2006
- Music Bands
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- Blues
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- Soundtrack Styles
- Yuri Lane Beatboxes to the Hip Hop Blues
Lewis O'nealAdjust font size Save for Later Email to Friends Print Mode Submit your own content on this or any topic....
- Welcome to Quick Stop Entertainment
Travis RoyAll right - for me, the gaming season has officially started. This is signified by the release of titles that have seen praise at various trade shows like E3, or games that have a good deal of buzz around them prior to release...
- Sure, tough guy, we know: Sunday night football is mandatory fall viewing in your household. That is, until 9 p.m., when you're suddenly all about Desperate Housewives
Howard HughesTo properly immortalize our bizarre obsession with things that we know are neither good for our minds or our reputations, we've chronicled some of the main offenders, for a sort of guilty pleasure "Hall of Shame." Don't even try to deny these....
- Red-Letter Day: Fantasy rock band 2006
Wayne RooneyThis is a paragraph of text that could go in the sidebar...
- Rock of Lamb
Lewis O'nealW HOEVER claimed that "metal is dead" forgot to tell the random woman pestering Lamb of God singer Randy Blythe for an autograph at a Minneapolis bar. But maybe she just didn't know that Blythe's band was metal...
- Technology 'can beat film piracy'
Steven BridgeNew technology is the key to beating movie piracy, the UK film minister has told industry executives. Making films available on demand as soon as they are released at cinemas could help stop fans watching illegal copies, Shaun Woodward said...
- Daytrading, Eminis, Forex trading, Swing Trading TOP STORY - 492999
Andy JonesReceive Dave's best setups each evening from his favorite trading patterns. Let Gary Kaltbaum send you timely emails to alert when breakouts occur...
| Jim Borowski | by www.wnbc.com. All rights reserved. | 3.01 | 16:13 |
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Mocking sales figures, pop fashion trends and fortune alike, the Washington state-reared, California-based Melvins are such an example of tenacity. The band is still alive after nearly 20 years together and releasing ever more albums of their unique brand of heavy rock. The group's new album, "A Senile Animal," is the latest example of the band's monolithically staying the course.
Hailing from the same neck of the woods as Nirvana, the band frequently loaned their drummer to a youthful Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic and thoroughly mentored the pair in the ways of punk rock.
| But, more than having famous friends, the group should be regarded for basically developing the musical template of '90s grunge: the thunderous, heavy guitars, staggeringly slow tempos and concussive drumming. This blend of hardcore punk abrasiveness and heavy metal riffage would provide albums of fodder for its Seattle neighbors like Soundgarden, Mudhoney and Nirvana. What the Melvins lacked in savvy songwriting skills, the group could made up for in consistency, producing album on top of album of mammoth-sized, bellowing rockers. At the same time, they were too early to be considered contemporaries of their grunge progeny (the band had decamped for California years before). Vocalist-guitarist Buzz "King Buzzo" Osbornes' booming, guttural vocals are still a surprising combination of allure and menace but without surrendering to the hypermachismo rife in most metal bands. His yelling is more about the recreating the sound of horror movies -- as key influence Black Sabbath did -- than trying to sound like a tough guy. Besides mainstays Osborne and powerhouse drummer Dale Crover, the group now includes second drummer Coady Willis and Jared Warren, the latest in a Spinal Tap-like line of bassists. The group was never short of power, especially with Crover's brutalistic stickwork and leaden foot, but the extra pair of hands makes the group's earth-shaking rhythms even more massive. "Blood Witch" has a stilted riff and moves forward at a stiff pace, which gives space for the dueling drums to play off each other and inject percussive flourishes. The song only breaks free of these constraints when Osborne's guitar exhales hot blasts of volume after each verse but quickly acquiesces again. For the last third of the song, the group can no longer hold the energy back and the riffs fly free, only diverted with occasional Primus-inspired drumstick clacking digressions. The song concludes with Crover and Willis creating a thunderous roar on their drums that sounds like a galloping herd of horses. they play really fast). As the riffs rumble, there is some raga-like, prog-rock interplay between Osborne and Warren tucked in to the end of the song's chorus. Likewise, "You've Never Been Right" chugs by like Sabbath's "Paranoid" before collapsing into another tumbling drum solo. The music is all explosive power and has no sympathy for the already pummeled listener. Sure, they are one-dimensional musically, but there's a degree of inventiveness in their narrow focus that has allowed them to remain immune to the changing times. Their music still survives. And in that way, so does their revolution. Distributed by Internet Broadcasting. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |
