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| | Hatebreed | | | Music Artist : | | Hatebreed | | Music Style : | | Punk | | Record Label : | | Koch Records | | Release Date : | | 2009-09-29 | | Store Price : | | $17.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $13.99 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Become the Fuse 2. Not My Master 3. Between Hell and a Heartbeat 4. In Ashes They Shall Reap 5. Hands of a Dying Man 6. Everyone Bleeds Now 7. No Halos for the Heartless 8. Through the Thorns 9. Every Lasting Scar 10. As Damaged as Me 11. Words Became Untruth 12. Undiminished 13. Merciless Tide 14. Pollution of the Soul 15. Escape [Diehard Edit]
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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The most complete Hatebreed album to date. Submitted on: 2009-11-06 |
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| I have always been a fan of Hatebreed, their combination of crushing riffs and uplifting lyrics make them the perfect weapon of choice for anyone that walks the line between hardcore and metal. This is, I feel, their most complete album to date; from the blistering "Become the Fuse" to the sledgehammer bonus cover of Metallica's "Escape," this album has no weak moments. Certain Hatebreed albums are an acquired taste (For The Lions, anyone?) but this offering showcases the band at their tightest, both musically, lyrically, and in production. This CD will stay in heavy rotation for many moons to come in my house. |
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Joe Swanson Submitted on: 2009-11-04 |
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The singer sounds exactly like Joe Swanson (the cop in the wheelchair from Family Guy when he screams). To me, the vocals sound like they were sung by someone who is trying too hard to sound mean. It's actually pretty comical. Don't get me wrong, screaming can be great. I love Slipknot, Cannibal Corpse, Deicide, etc...all of which scream in different ways. It doesn't sound like they're TRYING to sound like that. They sound like that is how they sound naturally.
I know that Hatebreed differs from the aformentioned bands because they are not "death metal". (with the exception of Slipknot). Also, I can predict that people will reply telling me I can't compare Hatebreed to another band because they are one in their own. But I don't care.
Visualize a bad actor doing an impression of a drill instructor. (Or the wheel chair guy from Family Guy screaming when he's agitated). This is Hatebreed's vocalist.
I am sorry that I wasted the money on downloading this album. It's too artificial-sounding for me. I know alot of people like Hatebreed because of their lyrics, but it's hard to take the lyrics seriously when it sounds like a fat kid intentionally lowering the tone of his voice with intentions of sounding mad.
I gave it two stars instead of one because it's not Country. |
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Just the best hardcore band Submitted on: 2009-10-26 |
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| If you are looking for something really really hard but i mean really really hard... this is the best band in the world. |
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It wouldve been worth it for 10 times the price Submitted on: 2009-10-25 |
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| Music like this is priceless. Most songs are fantastic, track 4 is one of the best songs ive ever heard. If you lift weights, buy this right now. |
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Wow... this is out of left field Submitted on: 2009-10-18 |
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| Hatebreed has been a band which I have always enjoyed, but never really thought they lived up to the hype surrounding them. Sure, Jasta is a great vocalist and frontman. I dig the whole eastcoast hardcore scene, mostly my favorite tough-guy gansta-core rockers Merauder. (They have an AMAZING new cd out now called God Is I. It is impossible to find in stores due to record company problems - pick it up here on Amazon.) I have dug out my Hatebreed catalogue when the time seemed right. They just were not a band that I could always listen to. On their self-titled record, this has changed. In recent years, Jasta has been bravely honest about his struggles with depression and feelings of being a hypocrite while he spouts venomous lyrics of hope and overcoming adversity while he secretly felt hopeless and defeated. This served as inspration for side projects Icepick and Kingdom of Sorrow. Now it seems the man from Connecticut has come full circle and is steering his fulltime band into new territory for hardcore. This was alluded to by the stellar cover disc For The Lions. Taking risks such as the cover of Metallica's early melodic thrash tune Escape made Jasta actually (::GASP::) SING! Blaphemy, you say. Kudos, I say. Back on the last true Hatebreed studio record I reported strains of melody in the guitar passages. Those are expounded on Hatebreed and harken back to such hardcore pioneers as Minor Threat, D.R.I., Bad Brains, and even Fugazi. This is great to hear from a band and frontman who seemed destined to be the filler band to take up the slack behind Sick Of It All, Vision Of Disorder, Merauder, etc... By opening up the sonic structure of what it means to be a Hatebreed record these guys have created what is in my opinion their first true classic. This release will stand apart from the previous discs on its diversity, honesty, and ingenuity. My hat is off to Hatebreed. Welcome to the hardcore elite. Five stars. |
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