The New Game CLEAN VERSION Mudvayne

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CD

  • Release Date: 11/18/2008
  • Sales Rank: 62,661
  • Label: EPIC
  • UPC: 886973958025

Listener Rating: (2 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Authenticity" See All

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Vinyl LP$19.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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The New Game

1LISTENFish out of Water 3:30
2LISTENDo What You Do 3:36
3LISTENA New Game 5:03
4LISTENHave It Your Way 3:45
5LISTENA Cinderella Story 4:39
6LISTENThe Hate in Me 3:22
7LISTENScarlet Letters 3:55
8LISTENDull Boy 4:13
9LISTENSame Ol' 4:49
10LISTENNever Enough 3:38
11LISTENWe the People 3:07

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

After toning down the Slipknot/Mushroomhead theatrics for 2005's Lost and Found, Mudvayne vocalist Chad Gray recorded an album with modern metal (almost) "supergroup" Hellyeah. The latter outfit's predilection for basic, rib-cracking hard rock pops up occasionally throughout 2008's The New Game like a gin blossom, interrupting sonic blasts of math-tinged nu metal with furious Motörhead-meets-Alice in Chains mayhem. The problem is, Mudvayne's own predilection for predictable loud/soft/loud set pieces, forgettable melodies, and over-reliance on words like "sorrow," "rage," "abused," "disease," "nightmares," and "beatings" keeps things from ever leaving the tarmac. With a winning opener (the familiar but nonetheless brutal "Fish Out of Water") and a handful of other keepers (including "A New Game" and the surprisingly subtle "Never Enough"), fans looking for a repeat of L.D. 50, Beginning of All Things to End, End of All Things to Come, and Lost and Found will be more than pleased, but those looking for actual growth would be better off cleaning out their refrigerators. [A "clean" version, sans profanity, was also released.] Reverend Lee Power, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 1

Palatableby SireHunt

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October 27, 2009: I was looking for something new to listen to and I heard Do What You Do and it stuck. They did a good job with the versatility on the album. The lyricism has some pretty good insights which can be important to a singer.