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Old Growth (Dig)
 
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Old Growth (Dig) [Enhanced]

Dead MeadowAudio CD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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MP3 Download, 12 Songs, 2008 $9.99  
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Music

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Biography

We've longed for the day when LA-via- DC translants DEAD MEADOW would drop a studio album that matched the power of one of the best shows on the planet. With 'Old Growth' the firm of Simon, Kille and McCarty have delivered a remarkably clear, powerful and confident recording that should ele- vate the trio into the pantheon of the great guitar bands of our time. Recorded at Sunset Sound (in the… Read more in Amazon's Dead Meadow Store

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for 9 albums, 4 photos, and 1 full streaming song.

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (February 5, 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced
  • Label: Matador Records
  • ASIN: B00109T8LW
  • Also Available in: Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #160,931 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Aint' Got Nothing (To Go Wrong)
2. Between Me and the Ground
3. What Needs Must Be
4. Down Here
5. 'Till Kingdom Come
6. I'm Gone
7. Seven Seers
8. The Great Deceiver
9. The Queen of All Returns
10. Keep on Walking
11. Hard People/Hard Times
12. Either Way

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Old Growth not like the old growth, February 27, 2008
By 
J. Rossi (Downers Grove, IL) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Old Growth (Dig) (Audio CD)
I am a huge Dead Meadow fan, and I don't hesitate to say this album is least representative of what makes this band great. There are some great tunes here, but this album doesn't repeatedly hit as hard as the ones that preceded it.

I like many of the songs, but whereas previous efforts would elicit 3-4 songs (at least) to go on a self-styled "greatest hits" CD, "Old Growth" would get 2, maybe 3 (those being Ain't Got Nothin, Between Me and the Ground and Til Kingdom Come). Seven Seers gets a nod for its unique instrumentation.

The Great Deceiver, What Needs Must Be, Down Here, I'm Gone and Hard People are alright but not overly memorable. Admittedly it has grown on me, but it's still my least favorite DM album. The Queen of All Returns just sounds tossed off and Keep on Walking is more like an updated CCR cover than a Dead Meadow original.

My biggest gripe is that this album just sounds flat, as in the production is off somehow. It sounds flat or less dense than what would be expected from DM. The bass lines are mostly buried and it sounds as if the guitar is coming through a little $100 amp instead of a stack of Orange amps. Luckily, the band makes up for that when it performs these songs live. And that's what this album is -- and excuse to get out and tour again and play live in their element.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dead Meadow branch out on Old Growth, March 29, 2008
By 
squidshack (Glendale, AZ USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Old Growth (Dig) (Audio CD)
Dead Meadow has been at their psychedelic brand of fuzzed-out rock & roll for a while now. From the heavy blues rock of their self titled debut or `Howls From the Hills', they have become one of the pre-immanent players in the field that critics seem to tend to call `stoner rock'. Dead Meadow's 2005 release `Feathers' showed the group as a whole beginning to branch out stylistically from the riff fueled sound they had so recklessly honed to perfection of their first few recordings to a more layered and less distorted flavor of psychedelic garage. This left a lot of their fans upset & calling out for a return to the hard rock sounds of old.

Fortunately however, on 'Old Growth', the band kept on moving forwards instead of falling back into that stoner rock safety net.

This latest release from the group is my personal favorite Dead Meadow album. For the side of their fan-base coming from a psychedelic rock background, `Old Growth' comes as a welcome breath of fresh air from the metal beatdowns. Here the band really tinkers with their sound & to great effect. From the epic folk raga of Seven Seers to the lurching funk of What Needs Must Be, this is one of Dead Meadows most articulate albums, relying on hazy layered atmosphere rather than pure overdriven crunch to bring its drugged-out sounds home. This is not to say that the band has completely abandoned their fuzz, they have just imposed a more song-oriented sound on top of those grooves.

This album is one of those that really plays well as a whole, with sings pulsating in & out as the album progresses. The last song on the LP, Either Way, is a slow, mournful southern-gothic tune very reminiscent of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club's sound off of their 2005 release `Howl', which I would very much recommend to anyone who digs this stuff!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good times come, February 16, 2008
This review is from: Old Growth (Dig) (Audio CD)
Dead Meadow has never really been into radically changing their sound -- they've lost some of their rough edges, and some of their thick fuzz, but nothing too drastic.

And in "Old Growth," they keep doing what they do best -- vintage hard rock, tinged with some bluesy psychedelica, metal and stoner riffs, with the occasional ballad, and striking lyrics with a sense of fantasy. The newly relocated band lays out a powerful, dark musical experience that sticks to their signature sound, but is able to twist in a few new sounds.

It opens with some odd echoing sounds... and blossoms into a powerful, muscular riff that languidly twines itself through the whole song. Over the ringing bassline, Jason Simon drawls out a string of languidly dissatisfied lyrics: "Their silence is golden/they watch their man... the sun shines away/there's nothing to say/people will talk anyway...."

They try out a tighter sound in the follow-up, the stripped-down Southern-rocker "Between Me and the Ground," before winding into the fuzzy, darkly angular "What Needs Must Be." Those two sets a certain sound that they continue throughout the album -- ominous dark hard-rock, languid bass-twisters, eerie fantastical folk-rock, some low-burning rockers.

They even mix in a couple of uneasy, relatively gentle little ballads, tinged with some electric guitar but mostly acoustic. And one of their most striking songs is "Seven Seers," a sinuous little folk melody played with some flickers of grimy keyboard. Think medieval hard rock with a bit of metal here and there. Sure, it resembles nothing else in the album, but it's pretty good.

It must be admitted that "Old Growth" doesn't really grow in any particular direction -- like Dead Meadows' last album "Feathers," they grind through dark, earthy stoner-rock, without the need to throw in catchiness or artificial highs. But they do it so well, so powerfully, that lack of change really doesn't affect them. It's just such good music, with very powerful musical skills and solidly written lyrics.

And that comes from the instrumentation -- a dark, simmering, sometimes blazing sea of guitars and bass. These guys don't try to show off, but they fill their music with powerful ringing riffs that twist into blazing melodies, paired with fuzzy muscular bass that runs just underneath it. It's a little like being swept off by a very small tidal wave.

And of course it's riddled with solid drums, and a touch of Doors-esque keyboard to add an otherworldly flavour. But Dead Meadow injects a couple other sounds -- they dabble in a mellow acoustic guitar from time to time, and even add a bit of sitar to their harder melodies, giving it a retro flavour.

I have to confess, I often can't understand what Simon is singing. His rough, lazy-sounding voice drawls through the music as if he's just been woken up, but you can hear glimpses of dark, languid lyrics with a fantastical edge: "No longer knowing night from day/I woke with the stars/I think you know your radiant form/pierces the dark..."

Dead Meadow doesn't go anywhere new in "Old Growth," but they continue the weird, wild, exquisitely hard style that they've done so well in the past. Definitely grows on you.
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