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01. "Now We Die" 02. "Killers & Kings" 03. "Ghosts Will Haunt My Bones" 04. "Night Of Long Knives" 05. "Sail Into The Black" 06. "Eyes Of The Dead" 07. "Beneath The Silt" 08. "In Comes The Flood" 09. "Damage Inside" 10. "Game Over" 11. "Imaginal Cells" 12. "Take Me Through The Fire"
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=ltd. Digibook= |
 | | Description: | Deluxe Edition includes a limited edition 48 page hardcover book created by Rafal Wechterowicz, Marco Vasco and long-time Machine Head art collaborator Strephon Taylor. Bay Area Metal Titans Machine Head, will release their eighth full-length album and Nuclear Blast Entertainment debut, Bloodstone & Diamonds, this Fall! The record was once again produced by Robb Flynn himself and Juan Urteaga (Testament, Vile), and like the last 7 out of 8 albums, was masterfully mixed by Colin Richardson (Carcass, fear Factory, Slipknot, behemoth. Devildriver). Additional tracking, editing, and mixing was done with heavy metal legend Andy Sneap (Exodus, Testament, Arch Enemy, Accept, Megadeth) and Steve Lagudi.First press edition. 48-page Mediabook.
The first edition comes with original Nuclear Blast web shop insert.
Mastered at Sterling Sound NYC
Mixed at Treehouse Studio, Chesterfield, UK
Recorded at Trident Studios, Pacheco, CA, Jingle Town Studios, Oakland, CA, the back of the tour bus North Dakota, in the venue, Fargo, North Dakota, and Machine Head's Jam Room, Oakland, CA, Feb. 2014 to July 2014.
Spoken word interludes on "Imaginal Cells" by Dr. Bruce Lipton and Steve Bhaerman, courtesy of the audiobook Spontaneous Evolution.
All songs sub-published globally by Fintage Publishing B.V. on behalf of Imperium Publishing worldwide.
? + © 2014 · Machine Head, issued under license to Nuclear Blast Entertainment
? + © 2014 · Nuclear Blast Entertainment · Öschstraße 40 · 73072 Donzdorf · Germany
Nuclear Blast USA · 5741 Buckingham Parkway Unit C · Culver City · CA 90230 · USA |  | | No. of tracks: |
12 |
 | | Manufacturer No.: |
2736133220 |
 | Product Safety
Responsible Person for the EU:
Warner Music Warner Music Group Germany Holding GmbH Alter Wandrahm 14, 20457 Hamburg, DE anfrage@warnermusic.com |  |
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Alexander S. - 13/Sep/2019  Predictably, Flynn & Co. did not begin to reinvent the wheel and went further along the path begun back in 2007 on the landmark The Blackening. "Bloodstone & Diamonds" sounds even more epic than its predecessors. There were even more large-scale tracks (basically, the length of the songs was 6-8 minutes). Symphonic inserts (the band had already used this idea on "Unto The Locust") add pomposity to the songs, along with the Flynn pair solo parts traditional for the band’s latest albums. -Demel - this gave a really impressive result, and therefore the current release sounds really magnificent.
But just the pursuit of scope and became the main problem of work. Nevertheless, after the genius "The Blackening", "Unto The Locust" was already manned weaker, and the new disc of the Californians, in turn, is weaker than the 2011 album. Compositions are mostly protracted, therefore difficult to perceive. They are remembered fragmentarily. "In Comes The Flood" fell in love with a chic soloist, Night Of Long Knives and Game Over - cool refrains. The mystical ballad "Sail Into The Black" completely disappointed. The eight-minute epic is not close to such masterpieces from the portfolio of the team as "The Darkness Within". Another disappointment is the "Ghosts Will Haunt My Bones" built on a guitar loser. The song is made by analogy with "Be Still and Know" from the previous album.
The second half of the disc, with the exception of the aforementioned “Game Over” and, to a lesser extent, “Take Me Through The Fire,” is generally a complete failure. A couple of miserable militants, an indistinct instrumental, and Flynn's melancholy meditation in Damage Inside.
Finally, about the good. Nevertheless, the work pleased the chic “odkrivashka” “Now We Die”, probably the only song with a strong opening riff and a strong single “Killers & Kings”. Rob Flynn sang at the proper level. His vocals are still the same emotional and original. That, however, is all positive.
After getting to know Bloodstone & Diamons, it seemed that Flynn had wandered too far along the path of experimentation, so he got lost there. The album has overkill with many components. Including, with solo parts. So I was sick of closer to the finale of the disc from the grandiose gash of a guitar duet. But quality riffs are clearly not enough for work. What has become the hallmark of the group over the years of its existence has been drowned in experiments.
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