JDB123
Out for smokes...
If I never had to hear another British guy sing with that annoying, horny, weepy vocal style I would die contented.the misplaced horniness of some of it.
If I never had to hear another British guy sing with that annoying, horny, weepy vocal style I would die contented.the misplaced horniness of some of it.
Someone on this forum said this months ago when I was trying to give them a chance and I could never unhear it.I finally got around to listening to these guys today.
They're just metal Imagine Dragons.![]()
They're just metal Imagine Dragons.![]()
Yeah but Zeal and Ardor is really interesting when you read about Manuel's inspiration for the project and why he started it. The idea of black slaves in the US rejecting Christianity and turning towards Satanism in similar ways to how Norwegians rebelled against the catholic Church, and taking that parallel to mix the typical satanic themes of black metal with the spiritual music of black Americans is an awesome concept to begin with, but then it's also executed VERY well.
This is... not that.
sleep token is rad y'all just hate new stuff and pop music
Ok. I've had time (and five listens and counting) to process and get the words together. Just a heads up, I'm going to get personal here.
I discovered Sleep Token in early 2020. A little before lockdown started. I saw someone on IG listening to Sundowning and thought the album art looked neat, so I gave it a try. By the end of "The Night Does Not Belong To God", I was hooked. Went back and listened to the EPs. Grabbed it on vinyl before their vinyls became more valuable than gold, a bunch of merch, some a little obscure (I only own scarves from two bands, these guys, and So Hideous).
And then covid happened. It became hard to cope as time went on (as in sure it did for many of us), but if I can point to an album that helped me cope, it was Sundowning. It was new. It was something I haven't heard before. And there were lyrics that really spoke directly to me (Dark Sign: 'I may break and bend to my basic need to be loved and close to somebody'. Blood Sport: 'I wanna be forgiven, I want to choke up chunks of my own sins'). 2020 granted too much time to reflect, and this album aided in this
This Place Will Become Your Tomb came. I remember Alkaline dropping, and just being hypnotized the moment the guitar dropped and Vessel sings 'Lets talk about chemistry...'. "The Love You Want" is still top 3 ST songs for me, with that final chorus with the crushing guitars giving me chills every time. For a while I thought Sundowning had stronger songs, but Tomb was a more cohesive album. This only became more true as time went on. And like Sundowning did with 2020, Tomb felt like a good sountrack to 2021: things were starting to improve, but it was still a dark time.
And here we are, with Take Me Back To Eden.
Let's get the surface points out of the way. Short version: I heard someone on YouTube say "This is what it sounds like when a band finds their sound." And did they. Somehow, there's Pop, R&B, Trap, Soul, Classic Rock, Prog, and Brutal Metal, and it just.... Works. Love or hate them, you can't deny Sleep Tokens uniqueness. The 6 singles I think have been spoken about enough (I'm gonna go ahead and say it, DYWTYLM is probably my 2nd or 3rd favorite song on here. Yet somehow, "Are You Really Okay?" Is my least favorite, but still a damn good song with amazing lyrics). "Ascensionism" is a straight up movie, going from ballad to trap rap to one hell of a breakdown in the middle. "Rain" is just epic, while not as long as the lengthy epics on here, it still rules. "The Apparition" is haunting R&B that again, they just make it theirs and make it work.
But there's two tracks I need to elaborate on, and those are the final two.
"Take Me Back To Eden", the title track, is their crown jewel. This song just feels like approaching the end of a journey, with some final harships to face. All the emotions are just laid bare in a way that stands out from the rest of their discography. It gave me a sense of trying to come to terms with many things I've been doing with personally for a long, long time, and face them head on. The epic journey to see the end all culminates in one of the filthiest breakdowns I've ever heard to close out the final minute, and goddamn it's cathartic.
Then there's Euclid. There's two lines that really touched me:
"I just need to leave this part of me behind"
"I must be someone new"
This song felt like a goodbye. All the callbacks to previous songs, all the talk of acceptance and moving on, it just felt like I was saying goodbye. Maybe not necessarily to the band (God I hope not), but to this story. To so many things I've gone through in my life for at least the last decade. To things that NEED to be left behind. And because music is more powerful than we give it credit it, I feel like this song, or rather, this album, has given me the will to accept things about life, and to say goodbye. And to leave those parts of me behind.
Also, I mentioned before how "The Night Does Not Belong To God" was the first Sleep Token song I ever heard. So for the album to end with THAT callback. Boy, that did some things to my psyche.
Very few records or bands affect me as much as Sleep Token does, or how Take Me Back To Eden did. It was heart wrenching, but at the same time, I feel like a heavy weight has been lifted from my soul. I can finally leave this part of me behind.
Man, seeing them in NYC in September is going to be something indescribable to me.
Music is a weird thing. But it's also wonderful and cathartic.
Worship.
Hoooooly shit, that's what I've been hearing, thank you lol.It doesn't help that Vessel is, to my ear, a dead ringer for the singer from anodyne pop band Bastille, who were completely fucking ubiquitous on British radio a decade ago.