Through The Eyes Of Heathens

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Through The Eyes Of Heathens  album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 44:09

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MMM. MMM. Good.

captainsketch

This album is the only Dozer I own or even have heard, so I can't compare it to any of their other releases, but as a stand-alone release it is fantastic. Chock full of simple, straight-forward, and super-catchy rock and singable melodies. I got this album because "The Roof the River the Revolver" was a free download and I liked it. but it's not a standout track like I was expecting. Every song holds its own and I can listen to this album on repeat almost indefinitely.

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stoner perfection

SmokinBuell

Tranquil, loud, bombastic, deliberate. "Through the Eyes of Heathens" is full of riffs and hooks that will have you coming back for more. A fine balancing act of brain-crushing rock.

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hard drivin' hard rock

willy10

if hard rock is your taste then you are definatly in for an ear treat. this band can grunge it up along with the best of the best. track 4 is the only cut that's a little different but it's still great rock.it's time to put on your earphones, kick back and crank it up till it feels good !!!

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surprising

greta_gore

Like it! Thanks emusic for another unexpected find through a free tune!

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Greatness

FergusjFergus

This has, by far, been the best band I have found on emusic, and one of the reasons they keep roping me in to pay money to download. After finding this magnificent cd, I believe that other great things are out there. Download "Through the Eyes of Heathens"...right now...and enjoy hard rock like it should be enjoyed

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Wolfred bullsh*t not!

soytown

Like the guy above me states, these guys have finally found their sound and the sh*t rocks! No longer can they ever be called just another Kyuss ripoff. Infact this album rivals such stoner classics as Sky Valley and SuperJudge! So worth the downloads!!!

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Wow

wns3

Dozer sounds like some of the "heavy" rock groups of the early 70's. I D/L'd "The Roof, The River, The Revolver. It had 2 nice breaks in it. One drum, and the other vocal. I like the hard vocal kinda pushed to the back just a tad so the bottom carried the tune. Mixed just the way hard rock should be. I'm in the free track mode for a few weeks until I get a refill. You know where I'm at! Peace.

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Finally outgrown the Kyuss-wannabees tag!

Wolfred

The likelihood is that if you've ever heard the name "Dozer" mentioned before then it will have been together with the words "Kyuss" and "rip-off". In the past there was no doubt to the truth in such statements...just listen to the Dozer/Unida (Kyuss singer John Garcia's current band) split EP elsewhere on eMusic to hear the level of hero-worship we're talking about. However, with ...Heathens they've broadened their pallet, let the songs breath, and added a bit of native Euro-character. It also helps that the quality of the recording outstrips anything they've ever delivered by a mile! This is a great record that fans of everyone from good ole' Kyuss to Mastadon will really appreciate. Recommended.

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They Say All Music Guide

Woe to those who dismissed Sweden’s Dozer as distant, perhaps unimportant satellites to the mostly U.S.-centric, late-’90s stoner rock solar system, for here they are: five years beyond that scene’s generally accepted heyday, and ten into their career — and still they orbit, only now exerting the gravitational pull of a major heavenly body upon the smaller bands that lie scattered across the vast stoner rock asteroid belt. Can you dig? In the event you can’t, and prefer less colorful descriptive methods, suffice to say that Dozer’s fourth album, Through the Eyes of Heathens, cements the band’s gradual transition from perceived followers to acknowledged leaders of this perennially beloved subgenre of underground hard rock. In fact, the ten tracks making up Through the Eyes of Heathens almost serve as a “state of the genre” address, boasting a broad cross section of historic stoner rock hallmarks. Take infectiously stripped-down tunes like “Drawing Dead,” “Born a Legend,” and “The Roof, the River, the Revolver,” for instance — all of them so timeless they simultaneously fit in with the mid-2000s crop of post-stoner heavy blues-rock bands (Halfway to Gone Alabama Thunderpussy, etc.), and those Harley-on-the-highway, heavy groove-rock anthems laid down by Dozer’s original contemporaries, Clutch and Fu Manchu. The apocalyptic “Until Man Exists No More” (featuring guest vocals from Mastodon’s Troy Sanders) and the light-and-shade extremes of “Days of Future Past” dredge up massive Black Sabbath power chords from stoner rock’s sister subgenre, doom, and the epic “Big Sky Theory” delves in neighboring psychedelic and space rock tendencies, while “From Fire Fell” and “Omega Glory” span the sonic evolution from Kyuss’ pounding quasi-thrash to Queens of the Stone Age’s driving riff-o-rama and quirky falsettos. There’s even a total curve ball in “Man of Fire,” where jabbing guitars and grungey vocal tones temporarily have the band sounding like Pearl Jam — weird! In the end, if there’s anything truly dating — or at least geographically specific — on this album, it’s Dozer’s obvious disinterest in any of the Southern rock overtones so prevalent among mid-2000s retro rock combos, but they’re never really missed here. Rather, Through the Eyes of Heathens offers top-of-the-line stoner rock at a time when it’s sorely needed to revitalize the style. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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