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Free Music Notes for Echoes, Silence, Patience & GraceFree Music Review: Brilliant Hit: 5 StarsExcellent cd. A must own for any true rock fan. This cd really demonstrates the growth of the Foo Fighters. Stanger Things Have Happened is a great cut, with fantastic guitar playing during the extended solo. This is a direct reflection of Chirs, as he is truly an underrated player. As with all Foo Fighters CD's, the radio songs are great, but the true gems are usually found on the b-sides.
Free Music Review: The best they've done in a long time Hit: 5 StarsThe Foo Fighters have been able to remain a huge rock act even after so-so albums In Your Honor and One by One. And it's no wonder, after huge radio hits Big Me, Monkey Wrench, Everlong, Hero and Learn to Fly, this group created massive staying power, even when songs such as Best of You didn't create the same vibe the others did.
Now, flash forward to this year, when The Pretender became such a wow song that it made everyone stand up and listen; the Foo Fighters once again created a magical song that screams a must-buy album. And this time it does not disappoint and even dares to be a little different for them. Standouts include The Pretender and Long Road to Ruin, of course, but also Let it Die, Stranger Things Have Happened, Cheer Up Boys (Your Makeup is Running), Summer's End and Home. I've also heard the Once and For All demo, though I'm not sure which version of the album it's on, but it's vintage Foo Fighters.
Only drawbacks are Erase/Replace and Come Alive because on both of them, Dave Grohl sings the titles of these respective songs over and over and over again, so they're kind of boring. Otherwise, they don't make em like this anymore in rock this popular and the Foo Fighters deserve every penny they make off Echoes, Silence, Patience and Grace.
Free Music Review: A solid hard rock record Hit: 4 StarsI had been a lukewarm Foo Fighers for a while, but when this record hit stores, it made me a fan for life. This record is nothing too fancy; it is just a good old rock record with lots of hard rock riffs, catchy melodies all over the place, plenty of acoustic guitar, and a very nice overall sound. I am aware that "The Colour and the Shape" has long been considered their best record, and it is very good, for sure, but I think "Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace" is better. Maybe nothing on it will ever resonate with the masses the way songs like "My Hero" and "Everlong" did, but I judge how much I like a cd based on how much I listen to it, and I have gotten a whole lotta mileage out of this disc so far.
If you are already a fan of Foo Fighters, this disc is probably right up your alley. If you are not a fan of theirs yet, this disc is probably as good a place to start as any.
Free Music Review: Good News From the Foos Hit: 5 StarsIn the mid-90's, I saw the Foo Fighters on the "Color and Shape" tour. At the time, I was particularly discouraged by the state of live music. I genuinely felt that the time for drums and guitars had ended, and that I should "gird my loins" for the next wave of musical expression, as previously exemplified by early `90s bands such as EMF and Jesus Jones.
Attending this show singlehandedly reinvigorated my belief in rock and roll. Eloquently enough, nearly a decade later I still find the Foos engaging. The Foo Fighters are a band that has inexplicably stood the test of time in the same way that U2 and Peter Gabriel did in the early 90s. While their reinvention may not be as obvious as their predecessors, it still situates them as one of the great and longlasting bands in the increasingly fickle musical landscape of today.
The beauty in the new Foo album lies in the way in which it navigates dynamics, songwriting, and energy. Even in its mellower moments, the "Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace" brims with a subdued tension that is only relieved by explosive energy. The way in which Grohl and his cohorts navigate the dichotomy between soothing lullaby and devastating intensity within song form (in the micro) and the overall album (in the macro) expresses a compositional maturity that belies the "rock" format within which they are categorized
For the careful listener, "Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace" is driven by subtle melodic polyphony. We're not talking counterpoint here, but the interplay between bass and lead vocal on "Erase/Replace" and rhythm guitar and vocal on "The Pretender" exhibit a certain compositional depth. To get much more complex would question the Foo's status as "rock" music.
And undeniably, The Foo Fighters' new album is, to its core, rock music. Who would have thought that, out of the ashes of the band that defined the `90s, a band that defines "rock" music through the strength of their vision would continue to be both relevant and eloquent? Perhaps the one criticism that can be leveled is their use of repetition and dynamic build-up for climax. Several songs on the album use this technique. However, there are also songs that are just loud, and others that are just, well, less loud (read: guitars are not distorted). Overall, it creates a relatively diverse acoustic environment.
The lowdown: Here's where melody, songwriting, and raw energy meet. I have had this album in my car for almost a month now, and I'm to the point of feeling guilty about removing it. I seem to enjoy it every time.
Free Music Review: The Long Road of the Foo Fighters Hit: 5 Stars'Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace' has become one of the favorites in my CD collection since I got it! From the album's hard-rocking beginning through to its softer end, the Foo Fighters take you on a journey of their musical past. You'll hear their familiar brand of post-grunge rock but sounding a bit more mature; sometimes a little hard, while other times you'll feel the influence of Classic Rock's past. There are some slower songs, some electric, one solo-acoustic (you'll swear it was an outtake from 'Skin and Bones'), and two at the end with Dave Grohl on the piano that sound like you just turned on the Adult-Contempory station. While the mix of styles sounds a little disjointed at times, the album flows from hard and loud at first to slow and relaxed by the end. With the variety of the songs, I can listen the whole way through the album and never get bored. While a younger version of myself would get turned-off at the softer moments (especially the songs at the end), the Foo Fighers have grown, and so have I, to appreciate all of the different styles that have influenced their sound over the years.
More Free Music Notes: First Review 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
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