Shopping > Music > Lamb of God > Ashes of the Wake

Lamb of God - Ashes of the Wake (CD)

Album Details: Ashes of the Wake

Release Date:08/31/2004
Label:Sony
UPC:827969070222

Other Available Formats: Ashes of the Wake

User Reviews: Ashes of the Wake

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    They Just Keep Getting Better

    By Momma  Sep 16, 2004 | 1 out of 2 found this Ashes of the Wake review helpful

    Pros: It's all good

    Cons: I agree - this should have a been a 2-CD set.

    Lamb of God is that rare band that just keeps getting better. "New American Gospel" was introduction into their thrash-soaked Southern fried crunch. They followed that great CD with "As the Palaces Burn", which proved they could g...et more acidic and brutal with time. With the release of "Ashes of the Wake", they have proven they are an unstoppable force, a sinewy, focused monster that is more confident in its attack than ever before. The band has honed its sound even further, and the technicality and tightness they display really separate them from the bands that have not yet learned the difference between practicing a lot and true cohesiveness as a unit. That is something that great production, which this CD has, can't provide and LOG have in spades. Randy Blythe's scream is in top form, and he does change up the vocals from time to time to keep your ears glued - as if they weren't already. Even the weakest track, "Now You Have Something to Die For" still fits in this puzzle and can't deflect the greatness of tracks such as "Laid to Rest" and the crunchy, Down-like "Omerta". The great tunes, great execution geat production makes this late-2004 release a front-runner for best of the year, IMHO. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Not The Greatest But Good

    By Dr. Gigglez  Jul 25, 2006

    Pros: N/A

    Cons: N/A

    Overall great CD just not on of there best CDs. A Great Death-Metal band though.!!

Pro Reviews: Ashes of the Wake

  • All Music Guide

    Come now, let us all genuflect before Lamb of God, for to them we owe our metal souls. In the fat ratinfested, decrepit tenement called Heavy Rock Manor, the Virginiabased shock unit is one of the few groups striving to keep the power on, and the hallways clear of gluttonous raprock/postgrunge False Marias. Yes, yes, Ashes of the Wake arrives via Epic Records, but this only will inflame the ire of the ignorant. For the rest of us, Lamb's ascendance to the majors melts a little more of the crap rock golden calf. Where previous efforts were fully automatic hot LZ's, they were also slightly muddled for the very same reason. They fired in all directions. With Ashes, producer Machine has sharpened the corner of every riff and tightened the turns on classicist metal gallops. Best of all, Randy Blythe's furious yawp is more focused. Rather than simply being another scary voice shouter, Blythe becomes Lamb of God's threshold of pain conduit. "Laid to Rest" begins with his measured statements ..."If there was a single day I could liveĀ…I'd trade all the others away flanked by atodds guitars of Willie Adler and Mark Morton. But then Blythe unleashes his demonic throat, and the guitars leap over and across one another like basilisks on a prowl for ibex kids. "Hourglass" offers more, its interlocking rhythms and breakdowns harkening to the dark lands of Scandinavia. But it doesn't go all the way there. This is American metal, after all, meaning that, in the tradition of Pantera and Poison the Well, largeform grandiosity is sacrificed in favor of a muscularity derived from hardcore and hard living. The aptlynamed "Omerta" begins with that code's reading. "Whoever appeals to the law against his fellow man is either a fool or a coward". It proceeds to stalk slowly into gear, the sound of a wounded man coming after his wouldbe murderers. "Blood of the Scribe" refits death metal's cadence for a leaner, meaner era; the less than subtle "Now You've Got Something to Die For" offers the kids a new unifying chant, not to mention some spectacularly martial instrumental breaks. Drummer Chris Adler really shines here, with Machine ensuring his snare is a steely bullet fired by viscous double bass gunpowder. Instrumental freaks will swallow the title track whole. Guest soloists Alex Skolnick (Testament) and Chris Poland (Megadeth) each get a taste, alongside Morton and Adler their insane fretting sounds like a city exploding. That's what Lamb of God does for us, what it does for metal in the 21st century. With the genre getting clogged by PVC goofs and Alice in Chains impersonators, Lamb of God balances the equation of power, rage, tradition, and craft. It kills the filler. - Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Ashes of the Wake

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Barnes and Noble

Write a review

$8.29Total Price N/A New Item everyday low prices Go to Store

Tower Records

51 Ratings

(41 Reviews)

Write a review

$7.98Total Price N/A New Item free us shipping for items over $25!!! Go to Store

SecondSpin.com

Write a review

$7.99Total Price N/A New Item

3 Coupons & Deals

Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Ashes of the Wake

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Ashes of the Wake

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Lamb of God

Originally known by the less-than-subtle moniker Burn the Priest, Richmond, VA-based Lamb of God decided to change their name shortly after the release of a self-titled debut in 1998. Featuring vocalist Randy Blythe, guitarists Mark Morton and Will Adler, bassist John Campbell, and drummer Chris Adler, the newly rechristened Lamb of God was launched in the year 2000 wit... Read more