Audioslave

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (252 ratings)
Audioslave album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 65:24

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audioslave

EMUSIC-029CB17D

If you love to play rock and roll (a drummers delight) then you have to check out this album its got real chops , its just too bad I cant download it to my laptop (a brand new total hotrod) in fact i cant download anything from this crappy service , i hope i didnt waste $25 on this site

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Issues

Jmelyn

I liked Emusic except for the fact that I had to download the first 10 songs first to get them to play AND now suddenly I can't download ANY because of some error. Therefore my balance of $8 is useless b/c I can't download anything! I think they have some definite issues with their website.

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Greatest New Rock Ever!!

paperphoenix

For those who only came for "Like A Stone", shame on you. At least check out "I Am The Highway". Very similar songs. The rest of the album rocks too. Key songs:1-10, and 14.

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Short Changed

jello1

Love to buy "Like a Stone" but I don't want to use 12 credits for it. What a great song, to bad I won't be purchasing it here.

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Audioslave!

acrobatastic88

big fan of both bands, like probably many 1st listeners. a lot of solid-to-great songs on here, Like A Stone in particular is a favorite.

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not as good as it should have been

DigitalHobo

I mean, c'mon! RATM + Chris Cornell! Yet, it's lackluster. Morello and co don't rock as hard as they did with Rage, and honestly, as much as I like Morello as a guitarist, he lays down some pretty weak guitar solos that should have been left out. That said, Like a Stone is just a monster of a song. It's worth the album for that song (and apparently emusic knows it, since it's an album only DL)

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chode rock

Stick-Up-Artist

eMusic, actually this is the modern rock that does suck.

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Sick CD

Jalal

Love this cd, love every song, so worth 12 credits.

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Get this!!

mjergens

Not really Soundgarden Mk II, but rather a nice blend of them and RATM. Chris Cornell's vox are in top form and there is some really good stuff here!

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OH LOOK ANOTHER EXCELLENT ALBUM THAT'S...

Alpsman

Welcome to the U.K. a music free world in the download era. If it's a decent album then you can bet your last dollar you can't get it in the U.K.

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They Say All Music Guide

It’s subtle, but telling, that the cover of Audioslave’s eponymous debut is designed by Storm Thorgerson, the artist behind Pink Floyd’s greatest album sleeves. Thorgerson, along with Roger Dean, epitomized the look of the ’70s, the era of supergroups, which is precisely what Audioslave is — a meeting of Rage Against the Machine, minus Zack de la Rocha, with former Soundgarden vocalist Chris Cornell. Though both bands were leading lights of alt-metal in the ’90s, the two came from totally separate vantage points: Rage Against the Machine was fearlessly modern, addressing contemporary politics over Tom Morello’s hip-hop-influenced guitar, while Soundgarden dredged up ’70s metal fueled with the spirit of punk. That these two vantage points don’t quite fit shouldn’t be a surprise — there is little common ground between the two, apart that they’re refugees from brainy post-metal bands. Of the two camps, Chris Cornell exerts the strongest influence, pushing the Rage Against the Machine boys toward catchier hooks and introspective material. Occasionally, the group winds up with songs that play to the strengths of both camps, like the storming lead single “Cochise.” For Cornell fans, it’s a relief to hear him unleash like this, given the reserve of his brooding solo debut, but this is hardly a one-man show. The Rage band, led by the intricate stylings of guitarist Tom Morello, gets their chance to shine, including on numbers that are subtler and shadier than the average Rage tune. Which brings up the primary fault on the album: Perhaps Morello, and perhaps the rest of RATM, are technically more gifted than, say, Soundgarden, but they never sound as majestic, as powerful, or as cinematic as what Cornell’s songs need. His muted yet varied solo album proved that he needed muscle, but here it’s all muscle, no texture or color. Consequently, many of the songs sound like they’re just on the verge of achieving liftoff, never quite reaching their potential. There are moments, usually arriving in the first half, where Audioslave suddenly, inexplicably clicks, sounding like a band, not a marketer’s grand scheme. Still, these moments are few and far between and it’s hard to get through this album as a whole. By the end, it’s clear that this pairing was a clever idea, but not an inspired one. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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