Track Listing 1. 30/30-150 2. Come What(Ever) May 3. Hell & Consequences 4. Sillyworld 5. Made of Scars 6. Reborn 7. Your God 8. Through Glass 9. Socio 10. 1st Person 11. Cardiff 12. Zzyzx Rd 13. Suffer - (Bonus Track) 14. Fruitcake - (Bonus Track) 15. Day I Let Go, The - (Bonus Track) 16. Freeze Dry Seal - (Bonus Track) 17. Wicked Game - (Bonus Track) 18. Frozen, The - (Bonus Track)
| Details | | Producer: | Nick Raskulinecz | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes This Special Edition version of COME WHAT(EVER) MAY includes six previously unreleased tracks, as well as a bonus DVD featuring live concert footage and four music videos produced to promote the album. Stone Sour: Corey Taylor (vocals). Before joining Slipknot, guitarist Jim Root and vocalist Corey Taylor fronted Stone Sour, an alt-metal act with melodic sensibilities. The success of Slipknot inspired Root and Taylor to reform their original outfit, and the band's self-titled debut proved a success. Stone Sour's sound is reminiscent of Slipknot's, yet is distinctive enough to stand on its own merits. COME WHAT(EVER) MAY, the group's sophomore effort, pushes Stone Sour's sound a bit further than its predecessor. While the album's sonic attack is still unremittingly heavy, with thunderous drums and distortion-saturated riffs, there's also a keen sense of accessibility that foregrounds melody and eschews thrash in favor of flat-out hard rock. These elements, combined with Taylor's throaty voice, place Stone Sour a cut above your average post-grunge metal outfit, and COME WHAT(EVER) MAY hints that the group may be poised for a mainstream breakthrough. DVD Features: Live in Moscow Concert Footage Documentary From Moscow Performance Track List 1. 30/30-150 2. Orchids 3. Take A Number 4. Reborn 5. Your God 6. Inhale 7. Come What(ever) May 8. Bother 9. Through Glass 10. Blotter 11. Hell & Consequences 12. Get Inside Plus The Videos: 30/30-150 Through Glass Sillyworld Made Of Scars
Editorial Reviews Captured live giving it to the audience with both barrels, it's a smashing glimpse of just how potent SS are onstage. Kerrang
[The album] builds on their debut's strengths, allowing frontman Corey Taylor to drop his mask in more ways than one. Alternative Press
[The album] serves its punishing riffs with a heaping side of heartfelt melody....This combination creates moments of genuine catharsis. Entertainment Weekly
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