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44 Reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chemistry is everything,
By Nick Summers (Villa Grove, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
You have to be a true follower of this music to understand. With this record Soulfly have shown they are here for the long haul. You couldn't ask for a better example of this than 3. With Max Cavalera, Marcello D. Rapp, Mikey Doling, and Roy Mayorga together it really works. This is the best line-up this band has ever had. I mean EVER!!! This isn't a review just to Max, but the BAND Soulfly. With songs like Seek N' Strike, Enterfaith, Downstroy, One Nation, LOTM, and Four Elements-you can tell they haven't lost their touch with the heavy music. But part of the magic of Soulfly is to create an interesting piece of art by doing the unexpected. Hence, the song Tree of Pain, a song in which 3 people sing about the heartache of losing a loved one. The Soulfly tribal vibe is most evident in the song Brasil. Max does the whole song in Portugese. He even uses a berimbau. Perhaps the most respected song on the album is 9/11/01. Just a minute of silence. Soulfly looked at making a statement by not saying anything at all. That in itself, said enough. Marcello and Roy are one of the greatest, most tight rhythm sections in Metal Music right now. If Mikey can keep bleeding out those sick, sick guitar solos he will be well on his way to being a guitarist of Kerry King like proportions. And as far as Max goes. Lyrical chaos runs through him. As well as the Brasilian musicianship that is in his blood as well as Marcello's I'm sure. If they can keep the line-up, keep it heavy, and keep it tribal, only good can come out of this.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
HERE WE GO!!!,
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
This CD is actually something that I've been looking forward to since the release of "Primitive". Primitive was such a brilliant work that I just could not get enough of anything Soulfly and I've been waiting with baited breath. This disc is another shining light in the darkness that is commercial hardrock, which constantly is bombarding us with Pepsi imagery and Pizza Hut idealism. Now, why the fact that Max's style has not changed is a negative thing with some, I personally think that it is a good thing. Innovation for the sake of innovation seems to be a key phrase with producers within the industry as the need to create more moneymaking machines in order to try to break through to the thinking man is necessary, but we do not fall for it. I would rather have Max write the same ideas with the same verve and power than try to do something "different" just because it seems to be "the time". Yes, this disc could be connected with Primitive and you might not be able to tell the difference...one big album...but so what. It ALL rocks so heavy I am ready to puke just thinking about it, so to Max I say "keep it up". One of the big things that stands out about this Soulfly release more than the other two is the VERY obvious control that Max actually had over Sepultura (his former band for those who do not know). I have been a huge Sep fan for many years and I was saddened by him leaving, but the Soulfly stuff, while somewhat different, gave me some of that energy back. With this release, it really seems that it could be a Sepultura album. There is the tribal element, which is a given, but there are some songs on this disc that really remind me of "Arise" and "Chaos AD". The political rantings and heartbreak over his stepson's death are once again the main theme, but I think that if it is that important for him to get it out, give it to me. Make me understand, baby!! Speaking of Dana, the one gripe I have about this album is the song "Tree of Pain". This song's intentions are very good...but its performance is lacking. There seems to be three songs wrapped into one song (hip hop, punk and metal), separated into three VERY separate parts, that by themselves would've been OK, but together they sound forced. Do not get me wrong, the song is good, but it takes the steam out of everything for a minute. That is not saying the message is the energy killer, it is the actual arrangement of the song itself that gets me. Oh well...the next song kicks very much butt, so it all works out. So, if you have any doubts about the disc, get rid of them. It is a very well put together piece of work. The balance of sad/angry and positive/informative are well done and it will not leave you feeling any loss at all for some kickin' tribal madness!!! The riffs shred and the beats thump hard. Not so much rappy rap on this one, but a return to a more "all metal, all the time" attitude.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WORTH EVERY PENNY,
By othieon (Tampa , Florida United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
From the very first track this is a metal explosion. The album gives a feeling of a band who's is finally coming into there own and very confident with there style of music. Max has with made for metal voice has secured Soulfly as one of the best metal bands of all time. This Album is the best to date for Soulfly. Max has integrated tribal sounds with hardcore guitar riffs. This is definitely not 80's metal proving that with the times Max has been able to adapt his style to be as hardcore as any band out there. No metal fans collection would be complete without this album.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Heaviest Soulfly record, but nothing new.,
By John Viagra (Your Mom) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
Max Cavalera is sort of a world champion of metal. He conquored the world with Sepultura back in the early 90s, and after he left, he did it again with Soulfly. Now, here in the 2000s, here is another Soulfly record, and to be honest it's a bit old.Not that this record completely blows, like I said, this is probably Soulfly's heaviest to date, it's just the whole metal with tribal beats has gotten old right after the first Soulfly record (with the exception of Ill Nino). Musically, I'd say this falls between the first Soulfly record and Sepultura's classic Chaos A.D. Yeah, it's heavy, it's hard, it's even fast too (ex. "Last of the Mohicans"), but other than that, it's really too repetitive for my tastes. Plus, the lyrics Max is writing is a far cry from the stuff on Chaos A.D. or Arise. Soulfly fans will love this, no doubt. But in my opinion, I think Ill Nino actaully does this whole latin-metal thing better than Soulfly at this point. Max, little tip, either do something new with Soulfly or go back to Sepultura.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Soulfly finally did it!,
By "jeremiahz" (Moline, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
I can finally say that Soulfly has releast a great album. Although I will say that alot of the riff's are very Sepultura sounding. It has the creativity that they have been trying to show. The first two albums were worth a listen but they weren't great. This record stays true to their experimentation of tribal metal, but this is one that I would truely recommend.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
an excellent release,
By Mat Fisher (St. Louis Park, MN United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
I think it is probably soulfly's best release so far. very good all around with a few sur hits such as "seek n strike", "one", and "brazil"
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Cavalera is a caveman,
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
Max Cavalera is a caveman, and I mean that in a good way. With every album, he seems to become ever more bestial. He is truly a metal icon, and it is refreshing to see that he has not compromised his vision at all over the years. This new album is great, not because it makes musical bounds into uncharted territory (because it definitely doesn't), but because we finally get to hear Soulfly as THEY are, just them. Gone are all the annoying cameos from the past two releases, which - in my opinion - made the music sound a bit disjointed. My only complaint is that the tribal percussion on this disc seems to take the back burner somewhat. Overall, I definitely think this album is a lot tighter than Primitive, and it even gives the original Soulfly album a run for its money. It's totally worth buying.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Soulfly's third album is a must,
By Michael (FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
The reason why Max Cavalera named this album 3 is, duh, third album, but also because he is obsessed with how some metal bands have released third albums (example: Metallica - Master Of Puppets, Black Sabbath - Master of Reality) and how the music becomes heavier. This album is definitely something of an evolution in the band's sound while maintaining what Max has wanted to do from the beginning, which is experiment with different sounds. Some people probably won't understand what I'm talking about when I say "evolution" with this album. *Slaps head* WAKE UP, STUPID! PAY ATTENTION! More thrash, punk, and hardcore sounding tunes, heavier than anything they've done on Primitive and the S/T album. Give it a listen.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Best of the new cd's that have been released recently.,
By j.t. (Naval Support Activity, Bahrain) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
If you enjoyed the first two offerings then you should dig this one as well. Better than the first cd but not quite as appealing as the second, somewhere in between and that is what this disc is.Good for boxin your clown or lifting the weight of oppression off your back.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
# 3, finally,
By vlad "vbelozeroff" (Moscow, Russia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 3 (Audio CD)
This time they're really something: the wallcrushing heaviness gets mixed with a fragile beauty of instrumentals, and - female vocals in the beginning and the end of Tree of Pain; and thrash, being dominant through the cd, easily meets the whole range of music styles and influences: classic rock, latin, nu-metal, and even punk.The indisputable stand-outs are: Seek'n'Strike, One, Tree of Pain, One Nation, Four Elements, and, maybe some more. The four bonus tracks decorate the album nicely, presenting a couple of lives from the Ozzfest'2000. Whatever you have expected from Soulfly, and anything you never have, it's all here, on this cd. |
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3 by Soulfly (Audio CD - 2002)
Used & New from: $7.45
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