One-X Three Days Grace

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CD - Bonus Tracks / Bonus CD

  • Release Date: 07/25/2007
  • Original Release: 2006
  • Sales Rank: 8,487
  • Label: BMG JAPAN
  • UPC: 4988017650790

Listener Rating: (46 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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CD - Enhanced$9.59
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer 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

One-X

1LISTENIt's All Over 4:09
2LISTENPain 3:22
3LISTENAnimal I Have Become 3:51
4LISTENNever Too Late 3:29
5LISTENOn My Own 3:05
6LISTENRiot 3:27
7LISTENGet out Alive 4:22
8LISTENLet It Die 3:09
9LISTENOver and Over 3:11
10LISTENTime of Dying 3:08
11LISTENGone Forever 3:41
12LISTENOne-X 7:18

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Success came quickly to this Canadian quartet, which sold more than a million copies of their debut album and dominated rock radio airwaves for the better part of two years. To hear them tell it on this follow-up, that's both the good and bad news. Much of One-X is given over to self-examination -- even self-flagellation -- about life in the spotlight, with frontman Adam Gontier pouring plenty of angst into songs like the surprisingly raw-edged music-biz kiss-off "Animal I Have Become," which pits the singer's growl against insistently bulldozing riffs. While the band tone down the aggression a bit on "Pain," which is cleaved by choruses that all but demand listener sing-alongs, Gontier sticks with his writing-as-therapy motif, waxing alternately desperate and repentant as he sifts through the detritus of some pretty nasty mornings after. Fortunately -- for both the album's tone and the overall psychic state of the band -- there's some acknowledgement of a light at the end of the tunnel. "Never Too Late," which opens with guitarist Barry Stock gently strumming out a moody filigree, has an airiness about it that dovetails nicely with Gontier's understated delivery of a lyric that addresses attempts to gain solid footing on terra firma. That's echoed on the album-closing title track, on which Gontier belies the world-weary sound of his voice by vowing to step forward with conviction -- an ending that, while not exactly Hollywood perfect, is thoroughly satisfying. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

got used to itby Dimon94

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August 16, 2009: first my friends let me have the cd i didnt really like it because it seems like they sing about the same thing in every song but i put it on my iPod anyways i got used to the songs and they got stuck in my head you i kinda like some songs now. :)

its a good cd though

This review was written about the CD Enhanced edition.

I Also Recommend: Swan Songs.

Great Albumby MacabreChris

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March 01, 2009: This is one of the best albums I've ever heard. Great job 3DG, can't wait for their next album!

This review was written about the CD Enhanced edition.


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