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Bow to the King of the Dead by classicrock3223 [Email]
Genre: Hard Rock

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SONG STATS:
Hits: 668
Comments: 4
Votes: 6
Plays: 102
Last Played: Nov 20, 2007 - 12:22:51 AM
Downloads: 17
Fans: 0
Uploaded: Sep 10, 2004 - 08:07:09 AM
Last Updated: Sep 09, 2004 - 08:31:15 PM



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Description:
hmmmmm...

Hardware:
G4

Software:
GB
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This isn't that good &mdash 09/11/04 - 08:09:24 PM
This isn't that good

[ Reply to This ]
A good start &mdash 09/11/04 - 11:15:31 PM
This sounds like a bit of an improv session with a
drum loop on it. This has a lot of interesting little
snippets of potential songs on it, and I think if you
pick out a few and let them develop, and add some
bass and add some drum fills, you could really have
something!

[ Reply to This ]
This isn't that bad either &mdash 09/14/04 - 06:28:01 PM
the production is a little shakey but the riffs were cool.
The lead work was pretty nice too. Myself I would add
some heavier drums and some bass I you might have a
winner.

[ Reply to This ]
cool &mdash 05/22/06 - 05:46:39 PM
Active, highly inventive riffs dance around tonal centers and then invert
all meaning as they approach an understanding they have defined.
Each song shifts and deconstructs in a twisted way only to reveal its
gradual plan for self-reformation, with each cycle of thematic peak
resulting in a new apex of motif. One might call it "virus study music,"
as what it traces is evolution of a song from basic principles unique to
that song, in an information age version of progressive music.

With an ear for rhythmic expectation like a funk band (without the
cheesy slap bass effects) with a temporary insanity driving a yen for
weird tonal progressions, highly verbal riffing and a slow buildup of
rhythm and harmonic accents, in a style reminiscent of Ripping Corpse,
Demilich place the listener into a staring contest with the self's own
concept of infinity.

This album is highly recommended - underground metal shooting off
in another direction, but in safe hands. It's punk in that these players
are not entirely technically obsessed and play sometimes a shade
unsteadily, but progressive in that they reach beyond any metal
structures known to humanity to create a language: a highly abstracted
and intellectual, atmospheric type of death metal that works out its
fractal by making sure every anticlimax is a peak view into the next
dimension of its context.

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