Track Listing 1. Ring in Return, The 2. In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth:3 3. Cuts Marked in the March of Men 4. Three Evils (Embodied in Love and Shadow) 5. Crowing, The 6. Blood Red Summer 7. Velourium Camper I, The - (Faint Of Hearts) 8. Velourium Camper II, The - (Backend Of Forever) 9. Velourium Camper III, The - (Al The Killer) 10. Favor House Atlantic, A 11. Light & The Glass, The 12. (Untitled) 13. (Untitled) 14. (Untitled) 15. (Untitled) 16. (Untitled) 17. (Untitled) 18. (Untitled) 19. (Untitled) 20. (Untitled) 21. (Untitled) 22. (Untitled) 23. (Untitled)
| Details | | Producer: | Chris Bittner, Michael Birnbaum | | Distributor: | RED Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Contains 12 untitled hidden tracks which follow "The Light & The Glass." Coheed And Cambria: Claudio Sanchez (vocals, guitar); Travis Stever (guitar); Michael Todd (bass); Joshua Eppard (drums). Recorded at Applehead Recording, Woodstock, New York. Although many treat the term "progressive rock" as a label meant to be avoided, Coheed and Cambria embrace it, churning out dense, guitar-heavy music that changes time signatures with a vengeance. Having toured with Thrice and Hot Water Music, C&C often get the "emo-core" tag, but the band also leans towards the metal side of things, inviting comparisons to Tool and even Rush. In fact, Claudio Sanchez's high-pitched voice does bear a striking resemblance to Rush's Geddy Lee, but C&C have enough of their own identity to avoid being pigeonholed. With their complex sound and elliptical song titles such as "Cuts Marked in the March of Men" and "A Favor House Atlantic," Coheed and Cambria appear to have passed Prog Rock 101 with flying colors and are ready and willing to introduce the sub-genre the next generation.
Editorial Reviews 3 stars out of 5 - [A] skillfully executed album, complete with helium vocals and catchy pop-punk tunes that belie the exclusively dark lyrical content. Q (01/01/2004)
3 stars out of 5 - ...Coheed and Cambria have achieved a new genre: arena emo... Rolling Stone (12/11/2003)
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