Nothing [Japan Bonus Track] by Meshuggah: CD Cover

    Nothing [Japan Bonus Track] Meshuggah

    BUY THIS ITEM

    • $41.99 Online price
      $37.79 Member price
    • skip to cart
    • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=4527516003043&productCode=MU&maxCount=100&threshold=3

    GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

    DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

    Usually ships within 24 hours

    Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

    Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

    CD

    • Release Date: 04/22/2003
    • Original Release: 2002
    • Sales Rank: 132,308
    • Label: MARQUEE INC. JAPAN
    • UPC: 4527516003043
     
    • Overview
    • Tracks
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Details & Credits
    Track List
    Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
    To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

    Nothing [Japan Bonus Track]

    1[Untitled]
    2[Untitled]
    3[Untitled]
    4[Untitled]
    5[Untitled]
    6[Untitled]
    7[Untitled]
    8[Untitled]
    9[Untitled]
    10[Untitled]

    About this Artist

    Editorial Reviews

    Within the realms of metal, few bands are more esoteric and left-brained than Meshuggah. These Swedes make music for clinically minded deconstructionists, and one really has to reduce Meshuggah's sound to its individual elements before seeing the overall picture. Nothing, their fourth full-length slab, only further cements their place as masterminds of cosmic calculus metal -- call it Einstein metal if you want -- and, to their credit, they're really the only ones to fall into said sub-subgenre. When odd riff cycles, robotic death vocals, neo-jazz chromatics, and mathematical songwriting are your primary weapons, it would seem easy to paint yourself into a corner creatively -- so where is Meshuggah to go after Destroy Erase Improve, the band's powerful statement of intent, and its follow-up, the suffocatingly violent and clattery Chaosphere? Well, besides being heavier -- guitarists Marten Hagstrom and Fredrik Thordendal used eight-string guitars to give extra growl to their off-kilter, occasionally dissonant chording -- the appropriately titled Nothing boasts more spacious arrangements, the jarring tempo and time shifts colliding with each other until the songs collapse in on themselves like black holes (see "Glints Collide" and the seven-plus-minutes of "Closed Eye Visual"). From there, light bends into "Nothing," the theme of the record rooted in existentialism and the psychic trauma it causes on the brain -- and so goes the cranium stretching, through "Straws Pulled at Random," "Spasm," and the creepily invigorating lunar strains of "Obsidian," all being anti-melodic, teeth-grinding jaunts into opaque mathematical regions, importing small amounts of Tool's psychedelia into the group's Death-by-way-of-Gang of Four sonic maelstrom. Nothing truly gives new meaning to the word heavy, redefining boundaries by pushing metal into the realms of abstract science; for those lucky enough to be tuned into Meshuggah's unique wavelength, the album, like all good art, tickles the subconscious while probing both the internal (the mind) and the external (space). And when Meshuggah explores, it's into uncharted territory. If only more metal bands could be so daring. [The album's Japan edition included a bonus track.] ~ John Serba, All Music Guide All Music Guide

    Customer Reviews

    • Listener Rating:
    Be the first to write a review!