Leathco wrote:
Eyesore wrote:
Leathco wrote:
Saw the new Zombie album for ten bucks, so picked it up.
It blows.
It blows bad.
He's lost that excellent touch he had on Hellbilly Deluxe and the refined style on Sinister Urge. Educated Horses sounds almost like overly processed hollywood rock. Only Let It All Bleed Out has potential.
Interested in seeing the official review from Metal Reviews.
Get out of my house!! The new album is fucking excellent! Once again this is just an example of a fan not being able to handle change. If you didn't like "(Go To) California," "Pussy Liquor," "Never Gonna Stop (The Red, Red Kroovy)," "Two-Lane Blacktop" and a few others then you won't like half of this album. There are NO bad songs here, there are just some songs that are different. You can't expect musicians to release the same goddamn thing over and over again, and when they do the same fans complain that the band hasn't changed! But when they change they complain about that! Pffffffffffffffft!
Obviously, someone has issues when someone criticizes a favorite artist of his. For shame!
I don't have an issue with change. I liked the change from Hellbilly to Sinister Urge where he went for a more studioesque, professional style. I DO NOT like the new "Hollywood" style he has going though. And I did like Never Gonna Stop. And as I said in my original post, Let It All Bleed Out is decent.
Fans complain about change only when it is for the worst. I didn't see too many people complaining about Disturbed changing styles on Ten Thousand Fists. Why? Because it was a good change, one that made this band better.
Unfortunately, your comments reek of fanboyism, instead of giving a well constructed defense you decide to flame me for my opinion, simply stating the album was "different".
Oh well. Back to Gamma Ray!
Fanboy? Your initial statement implied this sounded like a different band! It does not. It sounds like stuff he's done in the past! Saying it's "Hollywood" makes no sense considering no one but you knows what "Hollywood" is referring to.
1. Sawdust In The Blood and 100 Ways are both instrumentals interludes on this album. No change there. Every album prior to this one has had the same things.
2. American Witch, Seventeen Years Locust, Let It All Bleed Out, Ride and Lords Of Salem are just like the heavier Rob Zombie songs.
3. Foxy, Foxy, The Scorpion Sleeps, Death Of It All, and The Devil's Rejects are also like Rob's solo stuff, but the different songs like "Pussy Liquor" and "Two-Lane Blacktop" and "Never Gonna Stop (The Red, Red Kroovy)."
So essentially you've got two instrumentals, five songs like the heavier Rob Zombie and four songs like the more experimental Rob Zombie. "Seventeen Years Locust" is sort of a mix of both, but I think the heavy chorus puts it more in that "Bring Her Down (To Cripple Town)" zone. Either way, it's not different. It's just an even mix where in the past there were more heavier tunes. "Foxy Foxy" is the most rock-oriented track and it sounds like early Alice Cooper.
If you've ever heard Pyscho-Head Blowout or Soul Crusher or anything previous to those albums you'll hear that Rob has done nothing but incorporate that early White Zombie style into his solo work (though much better).
To be honest, I don't know what you're listening to because the style, feel and production on this album is consistent with Rob's previous albums. You can dislike it all you want, but arguing that something is "Hollywood" and not explaining what that means reeks of someone who didn't get what he wanted, so he's making something up to explain what happened. Anyone who didn't hear where Rob's solo music was going wasn't really listening in the first place.