Good Apollo I'm Burning Star IV Volume One: From Fear Through The Eyes Of Madness

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Good Apollo I'm Burning Star IV Volume One: From Fear Through The Eyes Of Madness album cover
Album Information
EXPLICIT

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 71:31

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Wow!

snappinshutters

A fantastic album that blows their past work like "In Keeping Secrets" and "The Second Turbine Blade" out of the water. Co & Ca definitely turned more to prog-rock sounds akin to Rush and Pink Floyd (especially in "The Final Cut"). If you ever have a chance to see Coheed & Cambria, you should! This album goes along side of a graphic novel that Claudio (the lead singer) wrote, but it is not necessary to read that in order to enjoy the album. You will not regret downloading this album. Don't be a wuss and not download the album because you couldn't use the free trial songs on "Welcome Home" Get the other songs too!

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Amen, Bitter Muppet

harpy

Amen. Looking up Ligamusic...

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EMusic is sooooo damn petty

BitterMuppet

Just because "Welcome Home" is now a part of the movie "9"'s trailer, they have made that song an ALBUM ONLY purchase. Guess I'll just get it from Ligamusic instead.

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They Say All Music Guide

Much like Death Cab for Cutie, emo devotees were aghast with horror when Coheed and Cambria left the shores of their indie label to depart for the good islands of major labeldom. And for those just catching up on their Coheed and Cambria folklore, this is first part of two, which will be the conclusion to their four-part concept album saga detailing the saga of two protagonists, Coheed and Cambria. It’s not necessary to know all of the facts and story lines to enjoy IV, which is a prog rock opera on par with anything that Rush or Queensrÿche ever released. But the interesting thing to listen for is the evolution of the group’s sound, since success sideswiped the group with 2003′s In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth. The emo chords and songwriting dynamics have been shed in favor of a more prog rock, heavy metal sound that was so dominant throughout the ’80s. Nowhere is this more evident than in the album’s opener, “Welcome Home”; with its bombastic strings, dramatic buildups, breakdowns, and dual guitar solos, it’s one of the best metal licks that 1985 never made. The album concludes with a four-part song cycle that acts as a subplot within the album, and will most likely act as a bridge for volume two when it’s released. But conceptual plots aside, this is an album that finally lives up to the heavy metal promise and unapologetically delivers the goods with a full head of steam. – Rob Theakston

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