Hatebreeder
Pizzicato Heartstrings
I hate it when reviews compare dueling guitar solos in ANY metal album to Iron Maiden's classic Adrian Smith/Dave Murray lineup. It's annoying as all fuck. 

nissan said:Lol, please agree with me - I need this![]()
I like you...DeathsSweetEmbrace said:You're weird. Coming from me, you should be concerned about a statement like that.
If the review, then I don't see what is wrong with that...The Greys said:I hate people who spend time giving a review just to give the album a 50% or whatever.
The Greys said:I believe music is subjective and regardless if you think something sucks does not mean it actually sucks where you need to review negativly. That's not going to help me picture an image in my head to see if I might like it or not just because you don't like it.
VittraEternity said:Elitist reviewers who believe they're extending their vocabulary, and those who use cliches such as "this album boasts dollops of...that will have you..."
Also people who are slightly disappointed with an album, or consider to be mediocre yet give the album a score of about 10%. That rating hardly reflects a mediocre album, rather it should be used with a terrible one.
The Bringer said:I wouldn't call them "elitist reviewers"... maybe educated. What if he had gone to university for 4 years majoring in English Philology? Of course he will have an extended vocabulary.
I agree with the scoring. A mediocre review should never get below 40%. I would say that 40-50% would be for a mediocore album from a band who had always released great albums. 50-60 (70)% from a band who may have suddenly released an album that is above their others but still maybe mediocre to good in their own genre.
Brainwave tendencies of sloping melodies move like rock n roll and this music repeats too often the idiosyncrasies of that genre, yet the vocals carry rasping not toneless melodies disembodied through the waves of music, richly harmonic and subversively rhythmic in an exacting evil dissonance rather than the sleazy nihilistic apathy of rockstar gluttony. Melodramatic, melancholic, dark music emanates emotional beauty with sad interlocking melodies speaking an essence of epic mental sensation through fantasy, metaphoric gateway to the artistic content inspired by this release in the listener.
V.V.V.V.V. said:"Now, I don't usually like this genre..."
Worst way to start a review. EVER!
dill_the_devil said:but you also don't want us to use adjectives to describe the individual passages (as surmised from the 'face-ripping solos' comment).
dill_the_devil said:How is it nonsensical? And how else would you prefer us to describe a solo or whatever? Display the tablature? How would you go about describing individual parts of a song then, considering that (here on UM) we're supposed to write no less than 200 words?
Not being arsey here, just curious as to what you (and others here) would like to see - you never know, might start to see a change in my reviews if there are any good ideas.
Int said:Nonsensical in that it doesn't make any sense. I'm pretty sure solos can't rip faces off and I'm also sure there are better ways of describing them using actual words. I dunno, fast? Tonal/atonal? The mood? And no, I'm not considering the fact that you at UM have to write a review in under 200 words* because this thread isn't even about UM reviews. I'm not having a dig at your reviews since I can't even remember reading one from UM, my point was simply that I hate the lazy and retarded metal lingo found in reviews that tell you nothing about the music.
*I assume that's what you meant otherwise I don't understand the problem.
Mercy/Severity said:ok i read i review once where the guy wrote about 3 pages, but never once mentioned the actual MUSIC. He just ranted the fuck on about his interpretation of what it all symbolised, but not one mention of anything to do with the music? He wrote pretty well, but nothing to do with the music = worst fucking review ever
dill_the_devil said:There's no problem, I was just using UM reviews as a frame of reference.
Sticking with solos for the sake of discussion, you suggest using 'mood' as a descriptive basis - but I find that equally as 'nonsensical' as using expressive terms like 'face ripping', because while a solo admittedly cannot actually tear the flesh from someone's face, it also cannot be considered plaintive, mournful, exuberant or any other emotional adjective you might care to attach to it.
I do use terms like face ripping, ball blazing, flesh searing et al in my reviews (not saying that you were having a go at my reviews here, just putting my personal opinion across), mainly because I think it provides a more interesting and personal expression of my reactions to a given passage than something like "at 2:38 there is a 30-second flurry of sweep-picked arpeggios followed by a sustained pinched harmonic" - the latter seems sterile to me.
My Man Mahmoud said:I think what you'll find that most people are reacting to here is the simple triteness of that kind of verbiage. It's like reading love poetry that starts "Roses are red..." If you find yourself reaching the point where only cliche will do to describe an album, that's a strong indication that the album itself consists of nothing but cliches strung together in a format that 'sounds like' metal, but has none of the spirit (you know, the kind of thing that might evoke the moods and emotions you deride). If that's the case, why are you reviewing it at all? There's plenty of mediocrity in metal without validating more of it with reviews.
dill_the_devil said:I wasn't deriding the emotions at all, and in fact what you describe as 'trite verbiage', I see as a way of expressing whatever feeling/emotion/response that passage evoked in me. Plus, I was merely saying that calling a guitar solo 'mournful' is just as nonsensical as calling it 'face-ripping' - not denying that a solo can evoke a mournful feeling in the listener.