Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not worth a re-buy, but for first timers, this is the one to get, February 13, 2008
So I got sucked in and picked up DA Red. I knew going in that the main album had nothing new outside of the color on the CD, that's fine. What was somewhat disappointing about the bonus DVD was how little effort seemed to go into it. The video is non-anamorphic widescreen. Essentially, what this means is if you are watching it on an HDTV, you'll have the picture enclosed in a little box in the middle of the screen, rather than having it stretched out to fit your TV properly like 95% of other DVDs would do. Some DVD players let you manually stretch the picture to fill the screen properly, but it looks crappy. Those watching on a regular TV will see the usual black bars at the top and bottom, so it's not as much of an issue for SDTV owners. Still, non-anamorphic discs were all but extinct 6 or 7 years ago, seeing one in 2008 is pretty pathetic.
For those wondering, the DVD includes a portion of a live performance (Wacken '07), with the songs Anethstesia, Christian Woman (full version), Love You To Death, and Kill You Tonight (aka Xero Tolerance). Also included are the videos for September Sun and Profit of Doom. The interview section runs about 14 minutes and contains an 11 minute Q&A about various topics that don't go outside the usual interview boundaries (Favorite place to play, favorite tour, what have you been up to, etc). Since the answers are often funny you forget that it's a pretty basic interview. The remaining 3 minutes is a pretty amusing "tour" through Coney Island. Josh - who, not unexpectedly, said nothing during the Q&A - walks around talking to cops and street trash. Entertaining stuff.
The album itself, for those who didn't buy the original recipe Dead Again, is a decent "Epic Doom-Metal" record that goes a bit light on the Beatles influences compared to their previous album (Life is Killing Me), although doesn't discard it completely (you may hear a Hey Jude riff in there if you listen closely). The sound of this album actually picks a bit of style from each one of their previous releases. The album houses an October Rust-meets-World Coming Down "gloom ballad" with September Sun, an epic Sabbath-esque tune in Tripping a Blind Man, and an almost Carnivore-sounding opening track with Dead Again. The final two tracks, An Ode To Locksmiths and Hail and Farewell to Britain, are strong standouts. There are a few tracks that sort of come off like filler, most notably Some Stupid Tomorrow. However, nothing is so terrible that you'll turn it off. Sadly there is no cover song this time around, although their recent "Symphony for the Devil" DVD has a bonus CD with a Santana Medley that will hold people over.
This is good for completists and people who want to pick up the album for the first time, but it's a tough recommendation for people who already own the regular version.
|
|
|
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Released again, February 16, 2008
Type O Negative's most recent album, "Dead Again" gets re-released and repackaged with a bonus DVD. For those who have already picked up "Dead Again", this new edition is only worth picking up for die hard fans of the band. The bonus DVD includes the live Wacken performances of fan favorites "Kill You Tonight", "Love You to Death", "Anesthesia", and "Christian Woman", along with the videos for "The Profits of Doom" and "September Sun". An interview with the band is included as well, but it's nothing special, even though it concludes with Josh Silver touring Coney Island, which is actually pretty funny. As for the album itself, you can check my old review for a more detailed take on it, but other than the DVD and new red colored cover, this is the same "Dead Again" that you picked up last year. That's not a bad thing for more casual or new fans to the band who haven't picked up "Dead Again" yet, of which by all means this is the edition to pick up. Other than that though, unless you are a die hard fan who needs to own everything Type O Negative, or you don't own "Dead Again" at all, this re-release isn't all that worth picking up.
|
|
|
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Type-O-Sabbative, March 5, 2008
Being old enough to rememebr the original line-up of Sabbath in all their glory, I have struggled to accept anyone as deserving of their praise until now. This album deserves that. It is TON going to a new level, of both style, class and imaginatiopn. They clearly salute the mighty Sabs by emulating many of their signature sounds. Not only tempo changes, but atmosphere changes, guitar solos, choral chants and inspirational riffs. Beautiful, fragile vocals one minute, Vampirish screams the next. Guitar that actually frightened my girlfriend (on "The profit of doom")! Heavy is not the word for this. It is brutal, satanic, dark, with hints of the old Sabbath knack of breaking into all together different feelings, then back again to the darkness of hell. It is heavenly one minute, hellish the next. Steele's vocals change so much, you may be forgiven for thinking they have a whole host of new lead singers. He clearly wants to be Ozzy on "September Sun" and uses synthesisers to make him even sound Ozzy-ish (as well as throwing a couple of "yeahs" into the mix). They blast into such Iommi style guitar licks (beautifully illustated in "These Three Things"), you would think they've asked him to guest for them. The old TON sound is there in places, but this is a brand new band now boys. And I, for one, WELCOME this as the strongest album they, or anyone else for that matter, has produced in years! Master of Reality meets Black Sabbath meets Technical Ecstasy meets Bella Lugosi.
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|