release date: Sep. 10, 2010
format: digital
[album rate: 2,5 / 5] [2,68]
producer: Jacob Hansen
label: EMI - nationality: Denmark
Track highlights: 1. "The Mirror and the Ripper" - 2. "Heaven Nor Hell" - 4. "Fallen" (3 / 5) - 5. "A Better Believer" - 13. "Thanks"
4th studio album by Volbeat follows one year after Guitar Gangsters & Cadillac Blood, is like all the band's previous albums produced by Jacob Hansen.
The line-up remains intact and the writing/composer-procedure continues with the same pattern with poulsen as only songwriter and composer of 9 out of 13 songs and as co-composer with other band members on 4 songs.
Again, the music is within narrow boundaries of primarily hard rock and as on the 2008 release, they succeed with a personal expression. They also explore the use of featuring artists as on their national monster-hit "A Garden's Tale" with Johan Olsen to much further extend. Henrik Hall of Love Shop features on track #2, Mille Petrozza of Kreator and Michael Denner of Mercyful Fate / King Diamond both feature on track #6, Jakob Øelund of Taggy Tones is featuring artist on track #8, and Mark 'Barney' Greenway of Napalm Death appears on track #11. The album is the band's final with guitarist Thomas Bredahl, who left the band in Nov. 2011.
I do recognize the band's contribution to the genre and their hard-headed determination. Still, the style is not really something I listen much to, and I still think many of their tracks sound too much alike. Compared to the predecessor that in some ways signaled a new way, they once again seem stuck with a matrix they think is the right combination to open the hidden safe box, which will let them have all the money and fame instead of making some new great music. Again, it's not entirely bad, it's just not something I would recommend because it's like the C and D-sides to an earlier album and I frankly think they are stuck in a bubble with no doors.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5 stars ]
Again, the music is within narrow boundaries of primarily hard rock and as on the 2008 release, they succeed with a personal expression. They also explore the use of featuring artists as on their national monster-hit "A Garden's Tale" with Johan Olsen to much further extend. Henrik Hall of Love Shop features on track #2, Mille Petrozza of Kreator and Michael Denner of Mercyful Fate / King Diamond both feature on track #6, Jakob Øelund of Taggy Tones is featuring artist on track #8, and Mark 'Barney' Greenway of Napalm Death appears on track #11. The album is the band's final with guitarist Thomas Bredahl, who left the band in Nov. 2011.
I do recognize the band's contribution to the genre and their hard-headed determination. Still, the style is not really something I listen much to, and I still think many of their tracks sound too much alike. Compared to the predecessor that in some ways signaled a new way, they once again seem stuck with a matrix they think is the right combination to open the hidden safe box, which will let them have all the money and fame instead of making some new great music. Again, it's not entirely bad, it's just not something I would recommend because it's like the C and D-sides to an earlier album and I frankly think they are stuck in a bubble with no doors.
Not recommended.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5 stars ]