...
Blast Tyrant takes this to the next level, with just as much cudos being owed to the bass and drums as to the guitars and vocals, combining bass-lines that wouldn't sound out of place on a Funkadelic album, and rhythms that inject so much groove into the album it hurts, making this a much ... Read review
Advantages: A good mix of funk, classic rock, straightforward metal and rock styles Disadvantages: So catchy that some of the songs go round your head for days
...the beginning.
Blast Tyrant takes this to the next level, with just as much cudos being owed to the bass and drums as to the guitars and vocals, combining bass-lines that wouldn't sound out of place on a Funkadelic album, and rhythms that inject so much groove into the album it hurts, making this a much more complete, polished sounding release than Pure Rock Fury, having sacrificed their live sound for a clearly more studio oriented ... .../>
To sum Blast Tyrant up is a very difficult thing. It has plenty of straighforward, moshable tracks such as The Mob Goes Wild and (Notes From The Trail Of) La Curandera, moody accoustic numbers with a country edge like Regulator and groove laden anthems like Army Of Bono and Cypress Grove that will have even the most hard faced metal-head throwing shapes on the dance-floor. All of course, wrapped up in sublime, thought provoking lyrics, ... more
It's not very often that I can own an album for a year and feel compelled to play it from start to finish every time I listen to it. in fact, thanks to my five disc changer, this album is rarely out of my CD player.
The overiding factor in Clutch's cult-like following is a trade-off between the original, attention grabbing and often downright oddball vocal stylings of Neil Fallon and the unstoppable riff-machine that is Tim Sult, combined with an unparalelled, story telling style of lyric-writing that has been with them since the beginning.
Blast Tyrant takes this to the next level, with just as much cudos being owed to the bass and drums as to the guitars and vocals, combining bass-lines that wouldn't sound out of place on a Funkadelic album, and rhythms that inject so much groove into the album it hurts, making this a much more complete, polished sounding release than Pure Rock Fury, having sacrificed their live sound for a clearly more studio oriented offering, while retaining more than enough of their originality to keep fans of earlier albums interested.
To sum Blast Tyrant up is a very difficult thing. It has plenty of straighforward, moshable tracks such as The Mob Goes Wild and (Notes From The Trail Of) La Curandera, moody accoustic numbers with a country edge like Regulator and groove laden anthems like Army Of Bono and Cypress Grove that will have even the most hard faced metal-head throwing shapes on the dance-floor. All of course, wrapped up in sublime, thought provoking lyrics, steeped in mysticism and myth.
The high point of the album for me has to be (In The Wake Of) The Swollen Goat, which, while fitting perfectly with the rest of the album, is reminiscent of The Elephant Riders.
The only let down is the final track Wysiwyg, which sounds like a particularly good jam-session that just happened to be recorded, and was stuck on the end of the album as an afterthought. Even so, it doesn't spoil the album one little bit, because if you dont like it, you can just skip it right back to the start again!
In my humble opinion, when it comes to rock, Clutch are the non-parallel, and Blast Tyrant is most definately their magnum-opus.
Product Information for "Blast Tyrant [Digipak] - Clutch" »
Product details
Title
Blast Tyrant [Digipak]
Performer
Clutch
Genre
Rock & Pop
Sub Genre
Hard Rock
Release Date
31/01/2005
Recomended Retail Price
15.99 GBP
Original Release Year
2004
Label / Distributor
DRT / Pinnacle
Engineer
Machine; Jeff Juliano
Producer
Machine; Clutch
Pieces in Set
1
Studio / Live
Studio
Stereo
Stereo
Format
Performer
EAN
828730041021
Catalogue Number
RTE 410
Additional notes
Album Notes
Clutch: Neil Fallon (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Tim Sult (guitar); Dan Maines (bass); Jean Paul Gaster (drums). Principally recorded at Water Music, The Machine Shop, Hoboken, Nerw Jersey. One of the most intriguing and enigmatic hard-rock bands of the 1990s and early 2000s, Clutch won over an intensely devoted fan base with its energetic combination of Black Sabbath-approved monster riffs, Butthole Surfers-esque genre-mixing, and lyrics that fuse Led Zeppelin's medieval mysticism with Faith No More's modern surrealism. With BLAST TYRANT, the group offers up a typically unpredictable sonic onslaught that benefits from punchy, in-your-face production values, recalling the best work of acts such as Stone Temple Pilots and Audioslave. While less concerned with pop hooks than those two bands, Clutch has always been one of the most melody-oriented groups of its genre. Here the Maryland-based ensemble matches harmony-laden vocals with a Pantera-worthy dose of power metal, and does it with a conviction that few contemporaries can match.
Titles on disc 1
1.
Mercury
2.
Profits Of Doom
3.
Mob Goes Wild
4.
Cypress Grove
5.
Promoter (Of Earthbound Causes)
6.
Regulator
7.
Worm Drink
8.
Army Of Bono
9.
Spleen Merchant
10.
In The Wake Of The Swollen Goat
11.
Weather Maker
12.
Subtle Hustle
13.
Ghost
14.
Notes From The Trial Of La Curandera
15.
WYSIWYG
Ciao
Listed on Ciao since
12/11/2005
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