Soulfly Enslaved Rar
Enslaved is the eighth studio album by the metal band Soulfly. It was recorded in fall 2011, mostly in Tallcat Studios in Phoenix, Arizona. Zeuss and Max Cavalera produced this album. This is the first album to feature Asesino frontman Tony Campos on bass, and the only album to feature former Borknagar drummer David Kinkade on drums, and the last studio album to be released through Roadrunner Records. May 31, 2014 soulfly enslaved rar soulfly enslaved review soulfly el comegente soulfly evo soulfly evo ski soulfly encyclopedia metallum soulfly enslaved full album.
Soulfly Enslaved 01. Resistance 02. World Scum 03. Intervention 04.
Gladiator 05. Chopper Interview Madman Rar more. American Steel 07. Redemption Of Man By God 08.
Treachery 09. Plata o Plomo 10. Revengeance [03/13/12] [Roadrunner] I gotta admit, I’m a pretty big fan of the legendary Max Cavalera. Yes, his music is simple, and his lyrics are borderline idiotic, but hey, sometimes simple is good. Soulfly, also known as the Max Cavalera and Marc Rizzo band (since they are the only constant members) have gone through a lot of changes. They used to be tribal groove metal, and as Max got tired with doing that and wanted to go back to his Sepultura roots (haha), they turned into more of a thrashy, hardcore groove band. Samsung Cool N Cool Fridge Zer Manual there.
A lot of that also comes from Marc Rizzo’s influence, and if you listen to his (awesome) solo work, it’s obvious that he is as influential as Max himself on Soulfly. Dark Ages and Conquer were just excellent, but I was disappointed with Omen. It was just lacking the raw yet catchy element that the previous two albums had. Now, the new album Enslaved brings yet another lineup change. Photoshop Cs5 Portable Tumblr there. Borknagar drummer David Kinkade and Static-X bassist Tony Campos have joined the fray, and all the signs pointed to an even heavier album than before. But do they deliver on the promise? Well, it’s definitely heavier than everything but Dark Ages.
While this album has a lot of double bass and even blast beats, it doesn’t come close to the smashing ‘Frontlines’. But as a whole, this is clearly their heaviest album, and due to Max and Marc’s trademark sound, it still sounds like Soulfly. If anything, they deserve credit for constantly reinventing themselves for the better. The production is much better than ever, and Marc Rizzo is quite a bit more innovative with his playing than usual. Max’s lyrics, unfortunately, are still not above fifth-grade level.
Actually, scratch that; I like them as they are. Max’s choppy delivery works well with the riffing, and the guest vocalists Dez Fafara of Devildriver, Adam Warren of Oceano and Travis Ryan of Cattle Decapitation add just the right amount of diversity. The songs are somewhere between Soulfly turned to 11 and Sepultura, which is exactly what Soulfly needed after so many albums. Clearly, David Kinkade is to be commended for a lot of this. His drumming is what takes the songs to the next level. While he doesn’t have the enthusiastic energy of previous drummer Roy Mayorga (my favorite Soulfly drummer), he makes it up with mechanical speed and precision. Actually, that kind of applies to the entire album.
There is less enthusiasm and more downright anger. This album is more oldschool Sepultura than any other iteration of Sepultur-alikes (older Soulfly, newer Sepultura, Cavalera Conspiracy). While this is clearly what everyone wants, I’m a bit disappointed because this isn’t as Soulfly as, well, Soulfly. There isn’t even a track titled ‘Soulfly VIII’, and every previous Soulfly album had that. I personally liked hearing Marc Rizzo wank over tribal instrumentals, but I guess he has his solo albums for that. Another casualty of the less-Soulfly sound is the memorability of songs. The songs on this album are less chantable and memorable than those of previous Soulfly records.