Ex Libris — Medea
★☆☆☆ This is some seriously self-indulgent stuff. The musicianship is fantastic… but it seems to only serve as an excuse for some out-of-place arias. Also, I can’t imagine ever willingly listening to this again.
★☆☆☆ This is some seriously self-indulgent stuff. The musicianship is fantastic… but it seems to only serve as an excuse for some out-of-place arias. Also, I can’t imagine ever willingly listening to this again.
★★☆☆ On the one hand, this is very capably executed speed metal, akin to Racer X or Accept. On the other hand, this album retreads on territory that’s already well worn, with nothing new to offer. Nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake isn’t always a winning policy.
★★☆☆ Imbecilic, but really great fun nonetheless. If you’re expecting Nile-like death metal, you’ll get the speed but not exactly the darkness. That’s okay, though; this album stands on its own. Also, the riffs here are really kinda novel and unusual, so that’s worth a couple of listens already.
★★☆☆ This is some seriously old-school shit right here. Think Rage-For-Order-era Queensrÿche or Maiden. It’s enjoyable, for what it is, but it’s also got the palpable feel of stale bread to it. The war’s over, Johnny.
☆☆☆☆ I just can’t get behind a band that sounds like System Of A Down covering The Shaggs. Look, I’m all for taking the cultural high road, but just because you can play a double harmonic scale on distorted guitars doesn’t mean your work is done.
★★★☆ I think I love this. At first, I was ready to dismiss it as just another noisefest… but there’s a lot of depth to the album. Elements of all my favorite sounds: old Genesis, Isis, Don Caballero, even Fredrik Thordendal’s solo work. (And you can’t go wrong with the excellent cover of Larks’ Tongues In Aspic Part II.)
★★☆☆ This is an interesting conundrum. On the one hand, this album is rockin’ a very alternate-universe-Slayer vibe. On the other hand, it’s kinda forgettable. Worth a second listen, but there’s something very humdrum about it all.
★★☆☆ A djenty symphonic blend of Fear Factory, the Inception soundtrack, and the gothic sensibilities of the movie “Prometheus” (without all the shitty lack of logic). It drags at times from its own meandering aimlessness, but it’s got a smattering of good and heavy ideas.
★☆☆☆ This sounds exactly like the kind of music I always wanted to make: jazzy djent for video games. Also, this music should not really be made by anyone.
So I’m getting ready to start the year of First Listens, and in doing my research I come across two new Buckethead albums in January alone. I dig a little deeper, and come across this:
You Can’t Triple Stamp a Double Stamp is the seventy-fourth studio album by guitarist Buckethead, and the forty-fourth installment of the Buckethead Pikes Series.