Rock, Metal The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2264.html Thu, 25 Apr 2024 06:24:26 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Bring Me The Horizon - There Is A Hell Believe... (2010) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2264-bring-me-the-horizon/8030-bring-me-the-horizon-there-is-a-hell-believe-2010.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2264-bring-me-the-horizon/8030-bring-me-the-horizon-there-is-a-hell-believe-2010.html Bring Me The Horizon - There Is A Hell Believe... (2010)

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01. Crucify Me (6:20)
02. Anthem (4:50)
03. It Never Ends (4:34)
04. Fuck (4:55)
05. Don't Go (4:58)
06. Home Sweet Hole (4:38) play
07. Alligator Blood (4:32)
08. Visions (4:09)
09. Blacklist (4:00)
10. Memorial (3:10) play
11. Blessed With a Curse (5:08)
12. Fox and the Wolf (1:43)

Musicians:
* Oliver "Oli" Sykes - vocals
* Lee Malia - guitar
* Jona Weinhofen - guitar
* Matt Kean – bass guitar
* Matt Nicholls - drums

 

Bring Me the Horizon’s opening gambit, the This Is What the Edge of Your Seat Was Made For EP, was an uncommonly good debut. At the beginning of 2005 it left me breathless, and promptly earned itself a near-perfect review.

 

Fast-forward five years, and they’ve experienced their share of amazing highs and crippling lows. The Sheffield five-piece – metalcore, but not strictly metal to the core – lost a member in 2009, departing guitarist Curtis Ward replaced by former Bleeding Through axe-mangler Jona Weinhofen, and attracted controversy when frontman Oli Sykes was alleged to have assaulted a female fan in Nottingham in April 2007. The story generated several headlines across the music press, but charges against the singer were eventually dropped. Still, pressure was expectedly felt – and it was a heavy load that would have broken lesser bands.

 

If anything, though, the fury directed the way of this still young band – Sykes is only 23 – just focused them on refining their music, making it both as brutal as possible but also retaining the crossover appeal that made their first recordings so instantly rewarding. What 2006’s Count Your Blessings lacked in clout, 2008’s Suicide Season made up for. The band’s second album is a bruising experience to this day, and this third LP takes things further still. Recorded in Sweden and California, it’s the group’s most ambitious offering yet, a collection that bites harder than anything they’ve previously issued but which is equally eager to kiss everything better.

 

F*** is a great example of their accomplished mix of tempestuous noise and cooling comedowns – as Sykes screams bloody murder, You Me at Six’s Josh Franceschi’s backing vocals persuade the subject of the piece to "come a little closer, tell me those three little words". At its centre, it’s a love song; on the surface, a riotous rant of lust: "Let’s f*** ‘til our hearts give up". Similarly impressive are Anthem, which pairs holler-along gang vocals with riffs so raw the UK mainstream’s heard nothing so savage since Gallows’ breakthrough debut; Visions, less a call to arms, more a full-blown casus belli; and the 65daysofstatic-style electro-glitch flourishes of opener Crucify Me. And everything’s sequenced fanta stically well – this is an album ‘proper’, not a clutch of tracks arranged in an arbitrary order.

 

They’ve not done everything the easy way, but Bring Me the Horizon today stand at the very vanguard of the UK metal scene. This third album takes risks with confidence, and the end results are never less than startling. ---Mike Diver, BBC Review

 

 

 

Bring Me the Horizon – brytyjski zespół muzyczny wykonujący deathcore utworzony w Sheffield. Zespół stworzyli w roku 2004 członkowie lokalnych zespołów. Nazwa zespołu pochodzi z filmu Piraci z Karaibów, gdzie Kapitan Jack Sparrow wykrzyczał zdanie "Now... Bring me that horizon!". Słowo "that" zostało zastąpione "the" i od tego czasu oficjalna nazwa zespołu to "Bring Me the Horizon". Nowa płyta zatytułowana There Is a Hell, Believe Me I've Seen It. There Is a Heaven, Let's Keep It a Secret miała premierę 4 października 2010.

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Bring Me the Horizon Wed, 26 Jan 2011 19:37:04 +0000
Bring Me The Horizon –Sempiternal (2013) http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2264-bring-me-the-horizon/13845-bring-me-the-horizon-sempiternal-2013.html http://theblues-thatjazz.com/en/rock/2264-bring-me-the-horizon/13845-bring-me-the-horizon-sempiternal-2013.html Bring Me The Horizon – Sempiternal (2013)

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1. 	"Can You Feel My Heart"   	3:47
2. 	"The House of Wolves"   	3:25
3. 	"Empire (Let Them Sing)"   	3:45
4. 	"Sleepwalking"   	3:50
5. 	"Go to Hell, for Heaven's Sake"   	4:02
6. 	"Shadow Moses"   	4:03
7. 	"And the Snakes Start to Sing"   	5:01
8. 	"Seen It All Before"   	4:07
9. 	"Antivist"   	3:13
10. 	"Crooked Young"   	3:34
11. 	"Hospital for Souls"   	6:44

Musicians:
    Oliver Sykes – lead vocals
    Lee Malia – lead guitar
    Jona Weinhofen – rhythm guitar
    Matt Kean – bass guitar
    Matt Nicholls – drums, percussion
    Jordan Fish – Keyboard, programming

 

Metalcore is one of the most frowned-upon genres simply because of the screaming. Many people pass it up because it's "too evil" or "doesn't take any talent", but obviously, there are several people that enjoy this kind of music. If you take a look at Bring Me the Horizon's official Facebook page - one of the largest modern metalcore bands - you'll notice that they have over 3.5 million likes, and it's only growing by the hour.

Since starting off as a deathcore band with their first two releases, This is What the Edge of Your Seat Was Made for (2004) and Count Your Blessings (2006), Bring Me the Horizon has come a long way. Some deathcore influences could still be heard on the band's second full length, 2008's Suicide Season, but it was a much more metalcore-oriented release compared to their previous work. In 2010, Bring Me the Horizon released their most successful album to date entitled There is a Hell, Believe Me I've Seen it. There is a Heaven, Let's Keep it a Secret, which reached #17 on the Billboard 200. This release saw the band experiment with several different sounds and styles (metalcore, post-hardcore, electronic, and symphonic metal), and it's quite obvious why it was received so well by so many.

About a year after the release of There Is a Hell..., (ex-)guitarist Jona Weinhofen revealed that the band would be taking another slight change in direction and adding more of a post-rock vibe on the fourth full length. After several months of waiting and wondering what exactly was coming next, Bring Me the Horizon announced that they had signed with RCA Records and that their new album - eventually entitled Sempiternal - would be released sometime in the early months of 2013. Finally, the time has come to delve into Sempiternal.

First and foremost, Bring Me the Horizon was telling the truth when they said that they were going for more of a post-rock vibe. Some kind of post-rock influence can be heard on every track, but the post-rock influences are most prevalent on "And the Snakes Start to Sing", "Seen it All Before", and "Hospital for Souls". Additionally, Bring Me the Horizon shows a few glimpses of industrial on some tracks, most notably "Empire (Let Them Sing)". Because of this change in direction, the drumming is different than on previous releases. It's much calmer and more straightforward, but it slots in with the rest of the music perfectly.

There is a somewhat surprising addition to Sempiternal, which would be the clean vocals. On There is a Hell..., there were times when Oli did his signature 'half yell/half sing', but he didn't completely sing anything. With that being said, Oli shows off his singing voice several times throughout Sempiternal, and when he does, he brings great joy to my ears. The cleans heard on this release are strikingly similar to what you would hear from Chester Bennington of Linkin Park. Tracks like "Can You Feel My Heart?", "The House of Wolves", "Go to Hell, for Heaven's Sake", and "Hospital for Souls" utilize these cleans extremely well, which makes the aforementioned tracks a few of my personal favourites.

There's much more to it than just the changes, though. Sempiternal is extremely well-written from start to finish; breakdowns are few and far between and the work on the fretboard is more impressive than ever. Furthermore, despite the drastic change in sound, Bring Me the Horizon managed to put a few familiar-sounding tracks on Sempiternal. "Anti-Vist" is very reminiscent of Suicide Season because of its sound, even more so the lyrics ("Middle fingers up if you don't give a fuck"), and because of its intro that contains synth, "Crooked Young" sounds very similar to "It Never Ends" at times.

Bring Me the Horizon has pulled out all the stops on Sempiternal. It's one of the freshest metalcore (I don't even think you could call it that now) releases to come out in recent years, but it still sounds like Bring Me the Horizon. Fans, both old and new, are in for quite the treat. Sempiternal is progression at its finest. --- megustareviews.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Bring Me the Horizon Sun, 24 Mar 2013 17:14:03 +0000