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Coal Chamber - Dark Days (Bonus Tracks) (CD)

Dark Days (Bonus Tracks)
$12.99
3.8 out of 5.0 stars 5 Ratings (4 Reviews)

Album Details: Dark Days (Bonus Tracks)

Release Date:05/21/2002
Label:Roadrunner Int'l
UPC:821838007623

Track List: Dark Days (Bonus Tracks)

  1. Fiend
  2. Glow
  3. Watershed
  4. Something Told Me
  5. Dark Days
  6. Alienate Me
  7. One Step
  8. Friend?
  1. Rowboat
  2. Drove
  3. Empty Jar
  4. Beckoned
  5. Anxiety [*]
  6. Save Yourself [*]
  7. One Step [Scott Humphrey Mix][*]

User Reviews: Dark Days (Bonus Tracks)

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Awesome band from their debut album to this one

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jan 12, 2006

    Pros: lyrics that kill, and a rhythm guitar that will tear you limb from limb

    Cons: no cons to speak of

    When I bought Coal chamber's first album I knew that they were going to kick ass for years to come. This album is one of those examples.

  • Overall:

    A great fusion of goth and cosmic metal.

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Oct 28, 2002

    Killer bass..great vocals, awesome lyrics. Very dark and heavy. The good songs are GREAT. Only due to a couple of average songs on the cd, I give it a 4. The group has definitely made a step in the right direction! Coal Chamber has now found the...ir sound! Thanks "Uranium" for turning us on to Fiend. Jimmy Darius Abernethy Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Dark Days (Bonus Tracks)

  • All Music Guide

    Coal Chamber will never be known for their striking originality or thoughtful songcraft. That being said, their self-titled debut album convincingly raged at all the right machines upon its release in 1997, sounding sufficiently spooky and sporting a mildly pleasing, if simplistic, rhythmic battery of subcutaneous, groove-oriented riffs and one-dimensional growled vocals. Their second record, Chamber Music, was generally written off as a half-baked electro-goth experiment, and if it found the band spinning their tires songwriting-wise, Dark Days is regrettably stuck in a mudhole, desperately needing a tow rope, new tires, a shove forward -- anything. It offers, well, a mildly pleasing, if simplistic, rhythmic battery of subcutaneous, groove-oriented riffs and one-dimensional growled vocals. Again. The cookie-cutter Korn-copped riffs and cookie monster vocals don't cut it this time, Dark Days grinding away at the same nu-metal stone, drubbing it into a numb nub, "subtlety" not being par...t of the band's vocabulary. Here, songwriting is condensed into a bland recipe consisting of two- or three-note riffs churned out on top of a solid groove-pocket while vocalist Dez Fafara picks out two or three blasi, tossed-off lyrical phrases and repeats them ad nauseum. While this formula might occasionally work within the context of typical verse-chorus-verse song structures -- opening cut "Fiend" is the lone intelligent standout, and "Glow" and "One Step" aren't too bad -- the tunes lean heavily on the idea of repetition-as-hook instead of presenting anything truly inspired or memorable. Ideally, Dark Days should find Coal Chamber maturing, kicking the musicianship and songwriting up a notch. But ultimately, it's creatively bankrupt, painfully obvious in execution and so caught up in guttural spleen-venting that it lands with a thud, smothering any potential spark. [The Australian release adds three bonus tracks: "Anxiety," "Save Yourself," and Scott Humphrey's remix of "One Step."] - John Serba, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Coal Chamber

Coal Chamber broke out of the Los Angeles alternative metal scene in 1997 with a sound often compared to Korn, although both bands formed around the same time and are quality representations of the scene's overall sound -- the heavy, detuned guitars of the murkiest Black Sabbath, grungy, noisy textures reminiscent of White Zombie or Tool, the white-knuckle intensity of ... Read more