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Era V.
Forum Groupie
Joined: November 17 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 97
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Posted: November 20 2007 at 20:57 |
I haven't heard their recorded output yet but saw them at Graspop in 2006 and wasn't very impressed. They pull out some material in the vein of simple Meshuggah style but didn't seem to have the ingenuity to keep it interesting. Although.....I had been in Amsterdam the night before so....
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 22 2007 at 01:46 |
Era V. wrote:
I haven't heard their recorded output yet but saw them at Graspop in 2006 and wasn't very impressed. They pull out some material in the vein of simple Meshuggah style but didn't seem to have the ingenuity to keep it interesting. Although.....I had been in Amsterdam the night before so....
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Simple....Meshuggah....Style???????
Edited by ProgBagel - November 22 2007 at 01:46
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 22 2007 at 01:47 |
Speaking of Meshuggah...Coprofago takes a huge influence of Meshuggah and makes it their own unique sound. Awesome band...'Genesis' is my recommended album.
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Era V.
Forum Groupie
Joined: November 17 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 97
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Posted: November 22 2007 at 03:48 |
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 22 2007 at 12:54 |
OHHHH.....ok. Phew. Thanking for clearing that up good sir.
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TheProgtologist
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: May 23 2005
Location: Baltimore,Md US
Status: Offline
Points: 27802
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Posted: November 23 2007 at 17:11 |
ProgBagel wrote:
Speaking of Meshuggah...Coprofago takes a huge influence of Meshuggah and makes it their own unique sound. Awesome band...'Genesis' is my recommended album. |
Coprofago is incredible,and a band I have been touting in the forum for quite some time...to little or no avail.
I like Genesis...but feel that Unorthodox Creative Criteria is better.They broaden their horizon's and experiment a bit more on that album.
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 23 2007 at 18:57 |
TheProgtologist wrote:
ProgBagel wrote:
Speaking of Meshuggah...Coprofago takes a huge influence of Meshuggah and makes it their own unique sound. Awesome band...'Genesis' is my recommended album. |
Coprofago is incredible,and a band I have been touting in the forum for quite some time...to little or no avail.
I like Genesis...but feel that Unorthodox Creative Criteria is better.They broaden their horizon's and experiment a bit more on that album. |
I know...such an amazing band. I only gave Unorthodox two listens and gave Genesis quite a bit. I'll get back to Unorthodox for a better opinion of it. I'll review there albums when I decide to start reviewing stuff.
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 23 2007 at 18:57 |
Anyone ever hear of Burst?
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guano
Forum Newbie
Joined: November 11 2007
Status: Offline
Points: 4
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Posted: November 24 2007 at 10:49 |
Are there any 'extreme death metal' sites that have streaming music? You know, for us poor folk who have to use dialup? I'm 'dying' to hear some of this music, but cd purchases are out of the question at the moment.
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 24 2007 at 12:00 |
Last.fm doesn't have full samples, but usually a decent amount of 30 second streamable songs for every artist.
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 24 2007 at 12:01 |
Just out of curiousity..what kind of file is 'Gamma Knife' on the Canvas Solaris page on the archives. Or what quality is it...the version on my cd seems to be a really toned down version of it.
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heyitsthatguy
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 17 2006
Location: Washington Hgts
Status: Offline
Points: 10094
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Posted: November 24 2007 at 12:05 |
Don't flame me, but simply riffwise, the guitar parts for Meshuggah aren't anything to technically behold, its just memorizing a weird rhythm and ignoring the drums behind it. Tomas Haake's parts on the other hand are extremely difficult for the sole reason that he's basically playing 2 beats at once constantly. The solo's may be difficult, but the riffs just don't strike me as very hard to play, just hard to memorize sometimes (this is more exemplified by the later output that I've heard).
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: November 24 2007 at 14:46 |
heyitsthatguy wrote:
Don't flame me, but simply riffwise, the guitar parts for Meshuggah aren't anything to technically behold, its just memorizing a weird rhythm and ignoring the drums behind it. Tomas Haake's parts on the other hand are extremely difficult for the sole reason that he's basically playing 2 beats at once constantly. The solo's may be difficult, but the riffs just don't strike me as very hard to play, just hard to memorize sometimes (this is more exemplified by the later output that I've heard).
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Well, technicality comes in more then one way. It's not just noodling around like crazy.
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TheProgtologist
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: May 23 2005
Location: Baltimore,Md US
Status: Offline
Points: 27802
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Posted: November 30 2007 at 12:28 |
guano wrote:
Are there any 'extreme death metal' sites that have streaming music? You know, for us poor folk who have to use dialup? I'm 'dying' to hear some of this music, but cd purchases are out of the question at the moment. |
Check some of the bands here in the archives under Tech/Extreme.....I am adding samples to a lot of band pages.
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TheProgtologist
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: May 23 2005
Location: Baltimore,Md US
Status: Offline
Points: 27802
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Posted: November 30 2007 at 12:30 |
ProgBagel wrote:
Just out of curiousity..what kind of file is 'Gamma Knife' on the Canvas Solaris page on the archives. Or what quality is it...the version on my cd seems to be a really toned down version of it. |
I added that,and just checked it out and it sounds a little...OFF.
That has happened once before to a sample I added,it's almost like it's playing at the wrong speed,but the sample is from my cd and plays fine.
I will delete it and try again.
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: December 01 2007 at 14:55 |
TheProgtologist wrote:
ProgBagel wrote:
Just out of curiousity..what kind of file is 'Gamma Knife' on the Canvas Solaris page on the archives. Or what quality is it...the version on my cd seems to be a really toned down version of it. |
I added that,and just checked it out and it sounds a little...OFF.
That has happened once before to a sample I added,it's almost like it's playing at the wrong speed,but the sample is from my cd and plays fine.
I will delete it and try again. |
I think the sample sounds better.
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Era V.
Forum Groupie
Joined: November 17 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 97
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Posted: December 07 2007 at 12:27 |
So I've been spending some time trying to get back into the roots of this whole tech-metal thing...some recommendations, some of them very obvious some not; Possessed, Pestilence, Believer, Tourniquet, Detritus (those last three are christian metal bands incidentally - don't let it put you off, some of the most technical music you'll ever hear, especially Tourniquet).
I've been thinking that some of those really early super fast thrash and death metal bands just had amazing technique, the likes of Altars of Madness by Morbid Angel - there's some crazy stuff going on there. Those musicians had to make themselves awesome players because they didn't learn their techniques....they created them! To play death metal nowadays all you have to do is look at some tab and then thrash away, but back then....they were really carving forward.
Anyway, bit of a rambling post - my utmost recommendation for today though is Tourniquet - get the albums Pathogenic Ocular Disonance and Microscopic View Of A Telescopic Realm and take it from there!
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TheProgtologist
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: May 23 2005
Location: Baltimore,Md US
Status: Offline
Points: 27802
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Posted: December 07 2007 at 18:23 |
Tourniquet sounds very interesting,thanks for the recommendation!!!!!!!
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FruMp
Prog Reviewer
Joined: September 16 2005
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 322
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Posted: December 07 2007 at 20:55 |
not really prog metal but I highly recommend Autopsy's Mental Funeral album, it combines the fat riffage of stoner metal with the brutality of death metal along with the atmosphere of early celtic frost. They do lots of wicked tempo change stuff that makes the standard death metal devices work so much better especially when a wailing solo kicks in at the same time.
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ProgBagel
Prog Reviewer
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2819
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Posted: December 08 2007 at 14:04 |
FruMp wrote:
not really prog metal but I highly recommend Autopsy's Mental Funeral album, it combines the fat riffage of stoner metal with the brutality of death metal along with the atmosphere of early celtic frost. They do lots of wicked tempo change stuff that makes the standard death metal devices work so much better especially when a wailing solo kicks in at the same time.
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hahaha. Yeah they are pretty god.
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