 Slipknot Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses) (Extras)
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On previous albums, the masked maulers of Slipknot took speed metal to new extremes, with songs that sounded like a threshing machine devouring a military drum corps. Now the Iowan nonet has married a little beauty to its beast, with schizophrenic results that are best summed up by the line "The only thing I ever really loved was hate." Produced by Rick Rubin, Vol. 3 (The Subliminal Verses) experiments with even newer extremes, which in Slipknot's case means tunefulness and traditional song structures. At one end of the spectrum, "Pulse of the Maggots" rallies the group's jumpsuited superfans with a Ministry-like turbo anthem. On the other, "Vermillion Pt. 2" goes all Beatlesque with a Read More chamber-pop arrangement complete with cello. Lyrically, the band retreats deeper into a paranoiac's fantasy world in which, as they say, "The test subjects run the experiment." Which might explain the album's occasional missteps. "The Virus of Life" sounds like an industri-metal production of Stomp, and "The Nameless" perversely splices a cooing boy-band chorus onto a g-g-gunking speed-metal verse; just because you can do something doesn't mean that you should.
If you're gonna work the potentially cheesy genre of rapcore, the least you can do is play loud. At their best, Slipknot go way beyond that, tossing Slayer, hardcore punk, Public Enemy and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre into the mix, with a mania for volume. We're talking riffs on top of riffs. Just skip the slow ones.
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