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Slipknot: All Hope Is Gone |
Contributed By: Sybru
Created On: Friday, 29 August 2008
Hits: 78
 All Hope Is Gone Having escaped the horror of nu-metal, Slipknot have quietly (well, you know what I mean) taken their place among metal's most acclaimed behemoths; the nearest thing today's world has to Metallica. After myriad troubles, the masked mutant clowns regrouped in Iowa, dumped Rick Rubin and called in stadium producer Dave Fortman in what was announced would be their most aggressive work to date.
There is no doubting that this album will be massive. Starting at the commotion about their new masks, the slow-burning marketing campaign has seen two great singles released already (‘All Hope Is Gone’ and ‘Psychosocial’) before the album lands, the day after their appearance at Reading & Leeds festivals, over two months later. Their competition for the accolade of #1 UK album is The Verve. Both bands have pedigree with hitting the top spot after Iowa flew in there after Reading 2001. It’s going to be a close one. The important thing when listening to All Hope Is Gone is to note how Slipknot have grown over the past decade.
‘.execute/Gematria’ is a classic opening track. It immediately makes you feel like you’re listening to Slipknot. There are sampled speeches and crazy bleeping bits building a massive sense of expectation before all the drama. And how much drama. While their eponymous full debut is a relentless slab of brutal metal and Iowa showed a desire to be even more obnoxious, 2005’s Vol 3: (The Subliminal Verses) displayed their melodic tendencies alongside the unruly commotion, especially in Corey Taylor’s vocals. This is much more evident in AHIG. There are a couple of actual ballads; love songs even. Neither the next single of ‘Dead Memories’ or the whole-heartedly soppy ‘Snuff’ quite fit in with the true Slipknot identity, to be honest. They’re good songs… if you’re listening to a Stone Sour album.
Thank the heavens then for songs like ‘Butcher’s Hook’ and ‘This Cold Black’. Acting as the gnarled, crusty bread which is sandwiching the soft, slow-cooked, honey-cured ham of ‘Gehenna’ those two tracks are quite simply put, fantastic. The vocals are still very much in the teenage angst vein. Even when Corey’s almost certainly referring to issues in the wider world, he dresses them up in a way that everyone can relate to. More often than not, however, his lyrics are easily clever enough to make an impact. The fact of the matter is that Slipknot are well and truly back. By and large, this is unquestionably a Slipknot album, in both style and delivery. Even whilst delving into unwelcome and unconvincing sappy territory.
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