Categorías:
Carrito 0

Su carrito está vacío

Meshuggah|Nothing (Re-Release )

Nothing (Re-Release )

Meshuggah

Disponible en
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo

Streaming ilimitado

Escuche este álbum ahora en alta calidad en nuestras apps

Comenzar mi periodo de prueba gratis y escuchar este álbum

Disfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción

Suscribir

Disfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción

Descarga digital

Compre y descargue este álbum en múltiples formatos, según sus necesidades.

Within the realms of metal, few bands are more esoteric and left-brained than Meshuggah. These Swedes make music for clinically minded deconstructionists, and one really has to reduce Meshuggah's sound to its individual elements before seeing the overall picture. Nothing, their fourth full-length slab, only further cements their place as masterminds of cosmic calculus metal -- call it Einstein metal if you want -- and, to their credit, they're really the only ones to fall into said sub-subgenre. When odd riff cycles, robotic death vocals, neo-jazz chromatics, and mathematical songwriting are your primary weapons, it would seem easy to paint yourself into a corner creatively -- so where is Meshuggah to go after Destroy Erase Improve, the band's powerful statement of intent, and its follow-up, the suffocatingly violent and clattery Chaosphere? Well, besides being heavier -- guitarists Marten Hagstrom and Fredrik Thordendal used eight-string guitars to give extra growl to their off-kilter, occasionally dissonant chording -- the appropriately titled Nothing boasts more spacious arrangements, the jarring tempo and time shifts colliding with each other until the songs collapse on themselves like black holes (see "Glints Collide" and the seven-plus minutes of "Closed Eye Visual"). From there, light bends into "Nothing," the theme of the record rooted in existentialism and the psychic trauma it causes on the brain -- and so goes the cranium stretching, through "Straws Pulled at Random," "Spasm," and the creepily invigorating lunar strains of "Obsidian," all being anti-melodic, teeth-grinding jaunts into opaque mathematical regions, importing small amounts of Tool's psychedelia into the group's Death-by-way-of-Gang of Four sonic maelstrom. Nothing truly gives new meaning to the word heavy, redefining boundaries by pushing metal into the realms of abstract science; for those lucky enough to be tuned into Meshuggah's unique wavelength, the album, like all good art, tickles the subconscious while probing both the internal (the mind) and the external (space). And when Meshuggah explores, it's into uncharted territory. If only more metal bands could be so daring.

© John Serba /TiVo

Más información

Nothing (Re-Release )

Meshuggah

launch qobuz app Ya he descargado Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Todavía no he descargado Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Descargar la app Qobuz

Está escuchando muestras.

Escuche más de 100 millones de pistas con un plan de streaming ilimitado.

Escuche esta playlist y más de 100 millones de pistas con nuestros planes de streaming ilimitado.

Desde 12,49€/mes

1
Stengah
00:05:38

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - T.Haake, Composer, Lyricist, Writer - M.Hagström, Composer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

2
Rational Gaze
00:05:26

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - F.Thordendal, Composer - T.Haake, Lyricist

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

3
Perpetual Black Second
00:04:39

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - T.Haake, Lyricist, Writer - M.Hagström, Composer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

4
Closed Eye Visuals
00:07:25

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - Haake, Lyricist, Writer - Thordendal, Composer - F.Thordendal, Composer - T.Haake, Lyricist, Writer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

5
Glints Collide
00:04:56

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - Haake, Composer, Lyricist, Writer - Thordendal, Composer - F.Thordendal, Composer - T.Haake, Composer, Lyricist, Writer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

6
Organic Shadows
00:05:20

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - Haake, Composer, Lyricist - Hagström, Composer - T.Haake, Composer, Lyricist - M.Hagström, Composer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

7
Straws Pulled At Random
00:05:16

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - T.Haake, Lyricist - M.Hagström, Composer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

8
Spasm
00:04:14

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - Haake, Composer, Lyricist, Writer - Thordendal, Composer - F.Thordendal, Composer - T.Haake, Composer, Lyricist, Writer

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

9
Nebulous
00:07:06

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - Hagström, Composer, Lyricist - M.Hagström, Composer, Lyricist

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

10
Obsidian
00:08:33

Meshuggah, Composer, MainArtist - Unknown, Composer, Lyricist - M.Hagström, Composer, Lyricist

© 2005 Atomic Fire ℗ 2006 Atomic Fire

Presentación del Álbum

Within the realms of metal, few bands are more esoteric and left-brained than Meshuggah. These Swedes make music for clinically minded deconstructionists, and one really has to reduce Meshuggah's sound to its individual elements before seeing the overall picture. Nothing, their fourth full-length slab, only further cements their place as masterminds of cosmic calculus metal -- call it Einstein metal if you want -- and, to their credit, they're really the only ones to fall into said sub-subgenre. When odd riff cycles, robotic death vocals, neo-jazz chromatics, and mathematical songwriting are your primary weapons, it would seem easy to paint yourself into a corner creatively -- so where is Meshuggah to go after Destroy Erase Improve, the band's powerful statement of intent, and its follow-up, the suffocatingly violent and clattery Chaosphere? Well, besides being heavier -- guitarists Marten Hagstrom and Fredrik Thordendal used eight-string guitars to give extra growl to their off-kilter, occasionally dissonant chording -- the appropriately titled Nothing boasts more spacious arrangements, the jarring tempo and time shifts colliding with each other until the songs collapse on themselves like black holes (see "Glints Collide" and the seven-plus minutes of "Closed Eye Visual"). From there, light bends into "Nothing," the theme of the record rooted in existentialism and the psychic trauma it causes on the brain -- and so goes the cranium stretching, through "Straws Pulled at Random," "Spasm," and the creepily invigorating lunar strains of "Obsidian," all being anti-melodic, teeth-grinding jaunts into opaque mathematical regions, importing small amounts of Tool's psychedelia into the group's Death-by-way-of-Gang of Four sonic maelstrom. Nothing truly gives new meaning to the word heavy, redefining boundaries by pushing metal into the realms of abstract science; for those lucky enough to be tuned into Meshuggah's unique wavelength, the album, like all good art, tickles the subconscious while probing both the internal (the mind) and the external (space). And when Meshuggah explores, it's into uncharted territory. If only more metal bands could be so daring.

© John Serba /TiVo

Acerca del álbum

Mejorar la información del álbum

Qobuz logo Por qué comprar en Qobuz...

De oferta actualmente...

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
Más en Qobuz
Por Meshuggah

Chaosphere

Meshuggah

Chaosphere Meshuggah

Koloss

Meshuggah

Koloss Meshuggah

ObZen

Meshuggah

ObZen Meshuggah

ObZen

Meshuggah

ObZen Meshuggah

Immutable

Meshuggah

Immutable Meshuggah

Playlists

Quizás también le guste...

Take Me Back To Eden

Sleep Token

Take Me Back To Eden Sleep Token

Back In Black

AC/DC

Toxicity

System Of A Down

Toxicity System Of A Down

72 Seasons

Metallica

72 Seasons Metallica

Invincible Shield

Judas Priest

Invincible Shield Judas Priest