Post some classic reviews

Sadguru

In my dream...
Jan 11, 2004
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Canada, Québec
Emperor - In the Nightside Eclipse

"I dont know why people keep calling these guys the founders of Black Metal. Cradle of filth formed three years before this cd came out, and Cradle does this sound a lot better. The man who sings in emperor relies on distortion in his instruments and production to hide the fact that he has no vocal range at all.
This band is nice if you like this type of music, but every element on here is one that has been improved upon by more creative bands like Cradle of Filth. So if you like this cd I would recomend Midian and Lovecraft & witch hearts."

- amazon.com

Brilliant!
 
If only the option really were called that...

For Metallica - St Anger:

"No, this album is nothing like Metallica has done before. It's not the lighting fast riffing from days of old, it's not the mature and professional sound that they had on the last two. This is one unique album, and I love it. It is dirty and down to earth. They are trying to express the emotion anger, and they do a damn good job of it. Any fan of heavy, agressive music can appreciate this album."

So it's immature and amateur then? Good call.
 
dill_the_devil said:
If only the option really were called that...

For Metallica - St Anger:

"No, this album is nothing like Metallica has done before. It's not the lighting fast riffing from days of old, it's not the mature and professional sound that they had on the last two. This is one unique album, and I love it. It is dirty and down to earth. They are trying to express the emotion anger, and they do a damn good job of it. Any fan of heavy, agressive music can appreciate this album."

So it's immature and amateur then? Good call.

Aha great!!
 
"Ulver
Perdition City
[Jester; 2001]
Rating: 2.6





Remember those two goth girls you knew back in high school. You know, the ones who hung out at the mall on weekends, drinking Starbuck's coffee and eating McDonald's? Well, Perdition City, the new album from Christophorus G. Rygg and Tore Yiwizaker (aka Ulver) is a lot like that. We're talking lite goth-industrial mixed with smooth-jazz and lame electronic music (the kind so bad it's actually deserving of the derogatory term often used by chain music stores: "electronica"). In other words, total and utter crap.

To be fair, the first few seconds of Perdition City offers some potential. The first track, "Lost in Moments," opens with a driving drum-machine beat heavily treated in reverb, reminiscent of the sort that often found its way into early 70s psychedelia. After about 20 seconds of this, the beat drops out, and it's contrasted with a few sparse piano chords, and random vocals-- likely from an ill-tuned radio-- in the distance. All's well so far. And then comes the saxophone. Guest musician Rolf Erik Nystrom plays sax with the schmaltziest of them, which, to be fair, is a perfect match for the vocals-- would-be-savvy, seductive male crooning that briefly flirts with the idea of carrying the song before mercifully disappearing again. As the sax thankfully leaves with the vocals, the drum machine and piano return. But even, in this new context, they sound plastic and uninspired. By the time the song draws to a close with ominous minor chords, whooshing wind-sounds and a crackly-voiced narration, you have to wonder how anyone's supposed to take this seriously.

Even more laughable are the liner notes, which-- if one can wade through the pretentious nonsense like, "I know now that the underworld is incalculable. To describe it we rely exclusively on tones, sounds, rhythm and pure instrumentality"-- divulge that these guys consider Coil an influence. Excuse me while I retreat to a corner and snicker to myself. Loud enough that people on the other side of the room can hear.

What these guys don't seem to realize, is that layering some "creepy" vocals ("Ghosts presence/ Ghost music from the radio at night and you can't sleep") over a vaguely ambient backdrop that sounds like an amateur rendition of "Who Will Fall" (as they do on-- snicker snicker-- "We Are the Dead") does not make you Coil. It makes you a Coil rip-off. A blatant one. You see, Ulver makes music that is "dark" and "ominous" without actually posing any legitimate threat, not unlike those two girls you knew back in high school.

Really. I can't even begin to comprehend how anyone who listens to Coil could release music this corny and live with themselves. Coil is legitimately frightening. Ulver is frightening like a made-for-TV horror movie is frightening. Ulver makes music for people who want to convince themselves that they dig creepy music without ever having to worry about nervously glancing over their shoulder or feeling their pulse rise.

For Christ's sake, on "Catalept," they actually sample Bernard Herrmann's theme from Psycho. Sorry, guys, but after Busta Rhymes uses it, it no longer falls into the "creepy" category. Furthermore, the creepiest music in the world generally ceases to be creepy when attached to a drum-machine beat that for all intents and purposes might be named "Demo."

Still, I'm all about giving credit where credit is due, and I must give Ulver points for variety. According to their website, Rygg and Yiwizaker hail from the Norwegian metal scene, pinning Perdition City as something of a departure from their norm. Even among the tracks on the album, the duo tries out a few different styles. Besides the pseudo-industrial tracks, there's also "Hallways of Always," a lame excursion into the world of Casio-based electronics, and "Porn Piece or the Scars of Cold Kisses," which takes a stab at bad adult-contemporary balladry and disguises it with Casio-based electronics.

Who knows? Maybe Perdition City was nothing more than a well-intentioned but ultimately ill-advised experiment for these guys. Maybe, in their more traditional form, Ulver is a really solid metal band. If that's the case, well, you can't blame a band for trying something different. That said, Ulver might want to consider a return to their metal roots. If I want to hear something creepy, I'll stick to the real thing.

-David M. Pecoraro, January 25th, 2002"
 
If you can figure out a way to search by username on Amazon reviews, I've written like 100 or so, maybe less. Most of them were just cut-n-paste out of RC (when it existed), lol.

I have LOTS of "helpful" votes, though. :cool:
 
A hilarious "Me speak English good" mini-review from Progarchives:

This great work. "Encore" it my favorite disc. I listen to it's from childhood and I think it behind fairest in discography Tangerine. Essence of music of group fine.It does not harm, that melody Ricochet and Rubycon it change . Guitar perfectly sounds with integrity. It's GREAT!
 
Demonspell said:
A hilarious "Me speak English good" mini-review from Progarchives:

This great work. "Encore" it my favorite disc. I listen to it's from childhood and I think it behind fairest in discography Tangerine. Essence of music of group fine.It does not harm, that melody Ricochet and Rubycon it change . Guitar perfectly sounds with integrity. It's GREAT!

Aha, my English is pretty bad, but I guess it's not TOO bad after all...
 
Demonspell said:
A hilarious "Me speak English good" mini-review from Progarchives:

This great work. "Encore" it my favorite disc. I listen to it's from childhood and I think it behind fairest in discography Tangerine. Essence of music of group fine.It does not harm, that melody Ricochet and Rubycon it change . Guitar perfectly sounds with integrity. It's GREAT!

:lol:
 
from chroniclesofchaos.com

Dark Tranquillity - _The Gallery_
(Osmose/Cargo, 1995)
by: Adrian Bromley (3 out of 10)
If speed metal, death metal, and thrash metal could actually weed itself out and put all of the imitators and rip-off artists into a barrel, I'm pretty sure that this Carcass/Brutal Truth clone band called Dark Tranquility would be in there somewhere. From opening riff of "Punish My Heaven" to closing number "Of Melancholy Burning", Dark Tranquility seem destined to run around in circles with their lackluster performance, not to mention the unoriginal approach and styling of their music. The only moment worthy of praise is the title track due to its use of the soft-spoken, choir-like female vocals overlapping the trudge and ripping chords of their instrumentation. Song after song, the album seems to stray from anything original, and the band paints itself into a corner and must be asking themselves, "Where do we go from here?" Bland and uninspired music with no appeal at all - that is, unless you like to hear someone else's music ripped off over and over again. This one is destined to become the newest addition to the delete bin at your favourite music store.
 
Tranquillian said:
by: Adrian Bromley (3 out of 10)

holy shit, so the guy actually does dislike something? you'd think from his countless 7/10, 8/10, 9/10, 10/10 ratings on webzines and Unrestrained that he's never heard a bad album.

and the one bad album he's heard is actually a classic. what a queef
 
This is dumb, I mean it's not as dumb as some of the others but it's PRETTY FUCKING RETARDED:

Stream From The Heavens
1994

AvantGarde Music

Extreme doom-death from the early days, Thergothon are easily the slowest band I've ever heard. Lacking the sublimity of Skepticism, Thergothon rely more on the mere extremity of tempo to be remarkable to the listener. Imagine Godflesh trying to play in a garage, while losing interest in their own music, every bar, and just leaving notes and chords hanging out to dry. Imagine them doing this on heroin and that's the asymptote for Thergothon's curve. The sludge has a turgid, irritating, over-articulate strum that grates on my nerves. Besides, it's quite apparent that the band members don't understand why trying to sound depressed doesn't mean you'll actually evoke that emotion in the listener: a significant amount of workload falls on the shoulders of that elusive factor called "talent".

It need not be pointed out how songtitles and lyrics fall prey to subcultural cliches. It need not be mentioned that there's endless repetition with little care taken to craft a meaningful "song" out of the blunt racket. I don't even want to get into the production - which, incidentally, is thoroughly nondescript and doesn't help one bit in alleviating the unfortunate mediocrity of the music. I just want to say "no thanks" and "better done by others like Skepticism and Unholy and Funeral and..."

Review by Rahul Joshi

Review date: 02/2002