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| | New American Gospel | | | Music Artist : | | Lamb of God | | Music Style : | | Alternative Metal | | Record Label : | | Prosthetic | | Release Date : | | 2006-04-04 | | Store Price : | | $16.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $14.99 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Black Label 2. Warning 3. In the Absence of the Sacred 4. Letter to the Unborn 5. Black Dahlia 6. Terror & Hubris in the House of Frank Pollard 7. Subtle Arts of Murder & Persuasion 8. Pariah 9. Confessional 10. O.D.H.G.A.B.F.E. 11. Nippon [Japanese Release Track][*] 12. New Willenium (The Black Dahlia) [Demo Version] 13. Half-Lid (A Warning) [Demo Version] 14. Flux (Pariah) [Demo Version] 15. Black Label [Multimedia Track]
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Totally different band than LOG today. Submitted on: 2009-01-27 |
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| I can't get into this CD. Even though Randy Blythe's current cookie-monster vocal style is far from the most musical aspect of LOG, the vocal performance on this CD is indiscernible and muted with a lot of high pitch screaming. I believe the mixing also leaves something to be desired. As one of my friends put it, "the double kick sounds like it is being played with two empty coke bottles." The CD also lacks the great riffing that I usually enjoy like about Lamb of God. I'm sure there are those who love this CD. It just isn't my taste. |
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Clearly........ Submitted on: 2008-02-18 |
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| this is the best effort Lamb of God have ever recorded. Anyone who actually opens their ears will agree. The problem you people are having is you got hooked on their latter efforts first, then popped in New American Gospel and realized the riffs they are playing 8 years later have not changed one bit. So you don't like it because it sounds the same when in fact, New American Gospel came before all their other boring albums. Not to mention the fact that at least back then, they could do those songs with some speed and not just do 500 groove only riffs like they are channeling Funkadelic. The bottom line is this band pretty much sucks the royal backside, but if you are going to even give this band a chance you might as well start and end with this album, because the rest are so worthless it's not even funny. |
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New American METAL Submitted on: 2008-02-15 |
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| If you're a diehard Lamb of God fan, then get this album! It's extremely raw and aggressive and will not disappoint! |
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Doesn't even compare... Submitted on: 2007-03-27 |
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So here it is. The infamous all-American metal album that kicstarted Lamb of God into being one of the most recognized assaults in modern metal. This is a decent album, but a decent album for any other band than Lamb of God.
The crushing techincal brutallity is stripped down completely on 'New American Gospel.' You hear none of the captivating groove, or maddening fretwork that this band has come to be known for. All the riffage is your basic power chord attack, closely relating this album to the term nu-metal in some instances. Every song on this album is easy for a basic guitarist to sit and pick up. Structurally, the songs are simple accompanied by poor production. This is clearly, the mighty Lamb of God before they realized their full potential, and while not holding a mere candle to their later efforts, this album doesn't even stand sturdily on its own merits. There are many albums out there much better than this one. This release is by no means awful, but simply does not prove to be anything other than just another metal album.
A shaky release, I would suggest this album only after you bought Lamb of God's later material. |
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strictly for huge fans Submitted on: 2007-02-26 |
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if your love of lamb of god was created when you bought Ashes Of The Wake, you may find this album somewhat disappointing. the production was not brilliant, Machine hadn't had a say in it, but the quality of the songs is far away their best work.
it'll cut slices off your ears and serve them to you in a light metal sauce, and wash it down with coarse lumps of brilliance. randy is flying at his best here, with writings of his life and the early days of Lamb Of God/Burn The Priest, Black Label telling the tale of sitting around a fume-emitting kerosene heater drinking Black Label and writing metal songs in a freezing sharehouse in Richmond, Virginia.
these guys are hardcore, i love it. |
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