El batería de Lamb of God, Chris Adler, dice que ya se han puesto manos a la obra y que el disco podría ser más variado
[quote:kisu21ms]In a recent interview with the Artisan News Service, LAMB OF GOD drummer Chris Adler stated about the progress of the songwriting sessions for the band's next CD, "We've done a bit more... Now, because of the amount of time we've spent on the road and the guys spending time alone in hotel rooms, there's a lot more material coming into the process than we've had in the past. Normally, we would tour, then get together and write. But the guitar players, with the technology changing and improving, have been able to do a lot on their own coming in, so there's a lot more ideas than we've ever had, which is great. Normally, it takes... We weed through all the stuff and it takes a really long time to get to what everybody agrees on. Now we've got a plethora of material, so I think it's gonna be... It's always an interesting process, but I think we're coming a little more armed this time."
When asked if "Wrath" set the standard for what fans can expect to hear on LAMB OF GOD's next album, Adler said, "In the past, my perspective has always been very reactive to what the immediate previous album was, as in 'Wrath' was more aggressive than [2006's] 'Sacrament' and 'Sacrament' was more produced than [2004's] 'Ashes Of The Wake', and those were choices that we made. But this time I feel that with all the records we've covered the bases and creatively gotten a lot of stuff out, grown as a band, evolved, made interesting choices along the way, and I think, this time, there's no real... I can't speak for [the rest of] the band, but myself, I'm not really particularly reactive to 'Wrath' in that I was very happy with the way 'Wrath' came out. So I feel a little more free coming into this album to not be so driven in one particular direction. I think we might be a little more wide open this time."
[video:kisu21ms]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oII8Wm011Zs[/video:kisu21ms]
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Ya tenemos título, el disco se llamará "Resolution" y saldrá a principios del año que viene. Y cuando decían que podría sonar algo diferente es que en uno de los temas habrá orquesta y coro, pero vamos, que podría ser la intro perfectamente
[quote:3p6jcox8]According to Gun Shy Assasssin, Richmond, Virginia metallers LAMB OF GOD have set "Resolution" as the title of their new album, due in early 2012 via Epic Records. The CD was once again helmed by producer Josh Wilbur, who worked on the band's last effort, 2009's "Wrath".
One of the tracks that are set to appear on "Resolution" includes an appearance by an orchestra and a choir. "There's opera singers, a whole symphony going onÂ… It's crazy," drummer Chris Adler is quoted as saying about the song, which features the band's vocalist, Randy Blythe, singing slowly over the opening. "We were trying to figure out how to not be black metal but do something totally different. I think we succeeded," Adler said.[/quote:3p6jcox8]
05/02/2007
http://www.metalhammer.co.uk/top-posts/ ... esolution/
el nuevo disco tema x tema
[quote:wgwjr4zy]LAMB OF GOD: Our Track-By-Track Guide To ‘Resolution’!
merl / Top Posts / 03/11/2011 18:27pm
WeÂ’ve heard the new Lamb Of God album, and we just canÂ’t keep it to ourselves. HereÂ’s our track-by-track guide!
New Lamb Of God album ‘Resolution’ dropped on our desks this morning, and as expected, we haven’t stopped listening to the fucker since. So, here are our first thoughts on one of the most anticipated albums of 2012….
Resolution Track-By-Track
Straight For The Sun
By the sounds of the Iommi-friendly monster of a riff that opens this album up, Willie Adler has been listening to a lot of Black Sabbath recently. Slow, doomy and fucking massive. Unexpected, but not unwelcome. Here we goÂ…
Desolation
Two tracks in and we already have a potential single on our hands. Kicking off with a riff that isn’t a million miles away from ‘Redneck’, this is classic Lamb Of God – big riffs, big grooves and a big chorus begging for big crowds. So basically, big.
Ghost Walking
This starts off with a bit of a curveball thanks to a spoken-word count-in and a cheeky bit of Southern-fried acoustic strumming, before exploding into a monstrous, swaying riff and some more of those untouchable Lamb of God grooves.
Guilty
Oh hey there fifth gear! This is the fastest song on the album so far, with a real face-ripper of an intro and some great hooks, with Randy Blythe in snarlingly vicious form. LOG are definitely back. WeÂ’ve missed you, boys.
Undertow
Not only does this keep the pace flying, but the catchiness of the chorus has “festival crowd” written all over it. Randy’s “I am the one who’s left to take the falllllll!” line is epic and could be one of the singalong moments of the year. You heard it here first!
The Number Six
Â…which is the sixth track, handily. Another big, big chorus, this oneÂ’s a swaying, chug-laden juggernaut with some nifty hardcore-style backing vocals thrown into the mix. InterestingÂ…
Barbarosa
We canÂ’t be sure if this handy musical interlude is named after the 1982 cowboy flick starring Willie Nelson, but given the acoustic melodies and eerie sound effects wah-wahed in, we wouldnÂ’t be surprised. Still; it neatly cuts the album in half and gives us a breatherÂ…
Invictus
Â…aaaand weÂ’re back. More shout-along backing vocals mixed in with some seriously thrashy moments and a monolithically big breakdown or two. One for the circle pits if ever there was one.[/quote:wgwjr4zy]
Ahí va un track by track!
[quote:20i49vnf]'Straight For The Sun'
A short intake of breath and then a scream that sounds like a hurricane of fire and sulphur accompanies a descending almost sludge riff that lurches unwillingly forward, driven on by the whip-lash of symbols and brutally metronomic drum work; If there's a better way to kick off a metal album, I haven't heard it. As the verse arrives, the muted power chords appear and as Randy Blythe growls “set me straight for the sun”, you can't help but sense he's being dragged up a pyramid for sacrifice rather than boarding some trans-astral space craft. Then, as the slow reverberation of the final chord dies, it's a splashy, tribal drum fill that leads seamlessly into…
'Desolation'
More instantly recognisable Lamb Of God fare, reminiscent of Wrath's 'In your Words' – a jagged, stop-start power chord sequence thunders over a thrash tainted riff before, once again, Blythe's guttural roar reigns the group into an impenetrable ball of barely contained chaos, largely held together by the incessant kick-drum work of Chris Adler. Lamb Of God aren't known as one's for unnecessarily fucking around with their formula, yet the brief and remarkably subtle, Van Halen-ish solo after the first chorus – however low in the mix it may be – maybe hints at a flirting expansion of their sound?
'Ghost Walking'
Is that an acoustic guitar? Yes, yes it is – and it's hammering out an intro so blues-y you can almost smell the rye whisky and barbecued meat seeping out of the stereo before the same riff is continued they way it should be (through a Marshall stack!) accompanied by more of Adler's signature complex-yet-direct drumming. It's not until around the three minute mark that Mark Morton get's his first solo, but is a killer: 30 seconds of sweet-picking, classic rock tinged fret wankery, right to the point that Blythe's spleen collapses while yelling “there's no one left to save”.
'Guilty'
Fuck intros; exploding like a pipe bomb it's straight in with the blast-beats, frantic death metal riffing and bellowed vocals. This is what the phrase 'constant battery' was invented for: three and a half minutes of high-tempo metal made for nothing other than headbanging. Lamb Of God had stated in interviews prior to completion of Resolution that they felt the album's overall sound harked back to earlier efforts such as As The Palaces Burn, and 'Guilty' is the most obvious example of that so far.
'The Undertow'
Lamb Of God have never made any secret the level of influence on them of seminal Swedish death metal progenitors At The Gates, but it's been a while since they've come out with a track that so obviously displays this influence – once you hear that lead guitar line you'll know what I'm talking about. That said, this is no mere homage and is as driving and anguished as you'd expect, and much in the vein of their most well known track 'Redneck'. As the track progresses to Morton's near-epic solo – complete with suitably excessive tremolo-arm abuse, sweet-picking and pinched harmonics all the way up your ass – it appears to fade out before coming back even heavier, and even sees Blythe performing some vocal porridging.
'The Number Six'
Still as heavy and as pleasant as getting a nail bomb enema from a homeless clown, the deceptively cleverly titled 'The Number Six' (sixth track, numerous references to grave digging; 6,6,6, yeah!? Or perhaps I'm over thinking it?), marks the first elements of melody to appear in the contrasting guitar lines during the chorus. Just over two minutes in, however, things break down into a minimal guitar and drum break that lurks somewhere in the no man's land between Pantera and Meshuggah when exploring similar areas, with Blythe's hushed, spoken vocals eerily reminiscent of Phil Anselmo's during tracks like 'Good Friends And A Bottle Of Pills' – after which things build to an epic creschedo.
'Barbarosa'
A brooding, repeated acoustic riff, backed by the squeals of feedback-drenched harmonics and the occasional, pitch-bent note signals a brief respite from the proceeding 25minutes of brutality. Given it's obvious Pantera-esque leanings the temptation is to dismiss it as mere filler, but it isn't, it's totally necessary, and provides an emotional weight not always apparent – it's a tool all too many a metal band ignore: Contrast, much like Iommi's interludes during Master Of Reality.
'Invictus'
The familiar squeal of feed back once again launches us into the track proper; benefiting from the relaxed atmospherics of the previous track the groove heavy main riff might just be the heaviest so far and once again showcases LOG's supreme ability to perfectly straddle the groove/death divide. Although far from the most complex track the comparative simplicity – couple with a frankly insane, fret burning solo – actually make it an album highlight.
'Cheated'
With its immediate, counted in start and d-beat leaning drum pattern the fist and overriding thought is that this is what Pantera would sound like covering Skitsystem – which is in no way a bad thing. At just over two and a half minutes is the shortest 'proper' track on the LP, but it's shit-kicking throughout. However, it never really goes anywhere and alarmingly it feels a little bit like filler, despite the fact that Blythe once again shows just how versatile a vocalist he is – when it come to roaring like Predator trapped down a well that is.
'Insurrection'
A stirring, emotive harmonic guitar riff again shows the variety the band are capable of – whilst sticking within the death/groove formula of course. Underneath the intense, oppressive rhythm section, very low in the mix, lurks a slow, plucked chord progression and comparatively softly sung/spoken lyrics, whilst the track gradually builds like coming up on whatever it is that metal-heads take instead of Ecstasy – Krokodil or something – climaxing in a return to the epic harmonic progression that brought us in, only louder. Lamb Of God have approached political issues in the past – notably on 2004's Ashes Of The Wake and given the tracks title this feels like another veiled expression of their politics, especially given the vaguely Eastern feel to the harmonic riff. And not to mention the albums cover art that calls to mind the news images of burning oil fields that have become so representative of the first Gulf War.
'Terminally Unique'
Starting in a similar vein earlier track 'Desolation', with its stuttering rhythm section laying over, in this case, an almost (say it very, very quietly) metalcore lead guitar line. It doesn't stay that way for long though; as the middle section arrives, pulling in a piece of pretty much every musical area explored by the band, despite its continued heaviness, it again feels ill thought out; you wonder if the track title is perhaps an in-joke, and it all becomes a little, well bland – even the breakdown, as Neolithic in its brutality as it is, comes across as mainly being an excuse for Adler to show just how good a drummer he is. In fairness though, he is really fucking good, and really fucking fast.
'To The End'
Much more like it: back to the grooves, back to the excessive use of pinched harmonics. In fact, crazy as it seems, the immediate thought here is that this is what Guns 'N' Roses could have sounded like if they became a metal band, rather than an ego maniac's cock rock vanity project – huge blues riffs abound, the type that pretty much command you to headband and barbecue the shit out of some meat. Again though, despite yet another killer solo from Morton, the track descends in to rather standard LOG fare and, it truth, could probably have served better purpose as one of those 'added incentive bonus tracks'. Shame.
'Visitation'
And insanely fast, palm muted, almost thrash riff rips open the track before more contrasting, melodic guitar lines add a sense of unease during the chorus with Blythe now going for a harsher, more hardcore 'yelp' approach with his vocal delivery. One the more emotionally charged tracks so far, this hasn't stopped Morton coming up with one of his best solos on the album – y'know the type, where all it makes you do is want to grab a broom and throw some serious air-guitar poses in front of your mirror; yeah, one of those.
'King Me'
Clean, brooding guitars lead us into Resolution's final track. Low in the mix there's and almost choir-like vocal line, as Blythe once again delivers his line in a hushed spoken tone that again recalls Pantera until… Wait, is that… It is! That's and orchestra! And it works, it really, really works! The track erupts into an epic four chord refrain backed by what certainly sounds like a full orchestra before – after a brief return to the brooding intro – it violently spasms into the sort of deranged riffing that could almost be compared to Destroy, Erase, Improve era Meshuggah, before which seamlessly moving back into orchestral epicness once more. LOG have a history of using the last track of an album to experiment and confound a portion of their listeners but the addition of an orchestra, on paper, seems like a huge gamble and it's testament to a band that have reached a level of proficiency and status that not only have they attempted it, but that it's paid off big time, saving as it does a rather patchy last third of the album.
It's perhaps not quite the magnum opus that the first portion of the record promised, but the scope of tracks like 'King Me', and the brutalism of the likes of 'Straight For The Sun' and 'Guilty' mean that, honestly, it's hard to see many metal records bettering Resolution next year.[/quote:20i49vnf]
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