Pantera Vulgar Display Of Power Remastered Raritan

Accusoft imagxpress crackberry. The reissue isn't the only Pantera release coming this fall. Earlier this month, the band confirmed that a visual history book called A Vulgar Display of Pantera arrives in September. Which gives any wearer limitless power and an altered appearance. Pantera Vulgar Display Of Power Remastered Raritan Johnny Cash.

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File Name:Pantera - Vulgar Display Of Power (20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition) (Remastered)
Download Torrent:Pantera - Vulgar Display Of Power (20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition) (Remastered)
Description:
Tracks
1. Mouth For War 3:57
2. A New Level 3:57
3. Walk 5:15
4. Fucking Hostile 2:48
5. This Love 6:32
6. Rise 4:36
7. No Good (Attack The Radical) 4:48
8. Live In A Hole 5:01
9. Regular People (Conceit) 5:27
10. By Demons Be Driven 4:40
11. Hollow 5:49
12. Piss (Bonus Track) 5:07
Last line-up
Philip Hansen Anselmo : Vocals
Vincent Paul Abbott (aka Vinnie Paul) : Drums
Darrell 'Dimebag' Abbott : Guitar
Rex Robert Brown (aka Rexx Rocker, aka T-Rex) : Bass, Back Vocals
Former/Past members
Tommy Bradford : Bass
Terry Glaze : Vocals, Guitar
Seth Putnam : Vocals
Matt L'Amour : Vocals
David Peacock : Vocals
Donnie Hart : Vocals
Marc Ferrari : Guitar, Back Vocals
Bio
Critics writing about Pantera fall over themselves in search of adjectives to describe the fiercely independent foursome: 'Boot kicking' 'A Metal massacre' 'Crushing' 'Searing' - the list goes on and on. Log onto the numerous websites manned by rabid and loyal fans, and you'll find chat rooms filled with their own testaments of faith to the band: 'They never sold out.' 'They're as heavy as shit.' 'They always speak their mind.' 'They don't give a flying fuck about any of the others.' But ask Philip Anselmo, the charismatic, often merciless frontman of Pantera about his take on their success and you get the true, living, breathing definition of this uncompromising phenomenon. 'We've survived every f*cking trend. Heavy metal, grunge metal, funk metal, rap metal - and we're still here. We put everyone on notice that we don't f*ck around. Our fans know we're true right down to the fucking core.'
Now, with Reinventing The Steel, their first studio album in four years, Pantera can once again let their music do the talking, and, as one writer has already noted about the band: 'You can hear them coming a mile away.' The new disc, following on the heels of 1997's gold-selling live opus, Official Live: 101 Proof, reverberates with a depth and intensity that secures Pantera's rep as the cream of modern metal.
'We took more time on this album, much more time,' says Vinnie. The album was crafted in their own home studio in Texas, with the band also anointing Vinnie and Dimebag Darrell as sole producers on this one. Terry Date, who has helped guide their four other studio albums, agreed it was time to let Vinnie and Dimebag fly solo on this effort.
'He was real cool about it,' says Vinnie. 'This just seemed like a natural progression to let us have a go at it. We were able to concentrate and work at a steadier pace, going in for a couple of days a week. It gave us a better perspective on what we were trying to achieve.'
And though Vinnie is reluctant to describe the songs on Reinventing The Steel, Phil's riveting bolts of passionate, in-your-face vocals are again faithfully discharged under the familiar Pantera squall of Dimebag's guitars, Vinnie's drums, and Rex's deft bass playing. 'It was great having Vinnie and Dimebag producing,' says Phil. 'We were able to come in and do our thing with none of the pressures. 100% bullshit proof. The evidence is in the music. We've been through so much together you can just feel the energy that went into making this album.' Soulfully brutal tracks like 'Revolution Is My Name,' and 'We'll Grind That Axe For A Long Time,' pulse with the restless angst fans have come to expect, but soar, as well, under the steady hands of Vinnie and Dime. 'We'll Grind That Axe' is in a way, our motto,' says Phil. 'We'll keep f*cking kicking ass, giving our all, until we can't fucking do it anymore. Our fans can breathe f*cking easy - we're back.'
As if they ever left. Pantera's incredible rise to the top of the metal heap has been nothing short of miraculous when you consider they've made their historic climb with virtually no radio support or MTV exposure. With 4 platinum albums under their belt, 3 gold home videos and 2 Grammy nominations, Pantera are just beginning to garner the recognition they deserve. Relentless touring since 1990's breakthrough album Cowboys From Hell, has seen them go from local Texas phenoms to mortifying trailblazers of the legendary Ozzfest. Touring with their idols was one of the highlights of Pantera's career. One of the most hellraising songs on the new disc, 'Yesterday Don't Mean Shit,' was penned on their most recent run on the Black Sabbath Reunion Tour. 'It was the first song written for the new album,' says Vinnie. 'I think it establishes the code.'
That code has held Pantera well through what many consider their classic album, 1992's Vulgar Display Of Power, to 1994's #1 Billboard debut Far Beyond Driven, to their most recent studio effort 1996's The Great Southern Trendkill. (TGST was the first album recorded at their custom built Texas studio.) 'It makes all the difference in the world,' says Vinnie. 'We totally control our own destiny now. And that's just the way we want it.'
The band's relentless touring and fierce dedication to their fans have inoculated them against the usual trappings that have brought down other metal bands, making them the standard-bearers for integrity minded rock.
A crown that came naturally, says Vinnie: 'We don't ever try to be anything we aren't. The bond between us and our fans can't be broken because they see themselves up there when we play. You can never fake that.'
Review
Vulgar Display of Power is one of the most important and influential metal records of the 90's. Arguably Pantera's masterpiece, this record is THE example of groove metal. Any groove record during that era was using this album as a guide. Even the classics like Machine Head's Burn My Eyes and Sepultura's Chaos A.D. were following this album. Hell, even Pantera's own Far Beyond Driven record used Vulgar Display of Power as a blueprint. This album is just a masterpiece. Non-metal fans know what it is and respect it.
This album contains so many timeless songs, it's unbelievable. Everybody knows 'Mouth for War', 'A New Level', 'Walk', 'Fucking Hostile', 'This Love', 'Regular People (Conceit)', and 'Hollow'. That's more than half the record. And people don't know the songs because of notoriety a la Cannibal Corpse's 'Meat Hook Sodomy' or 'Hammer Smashed Face'. They know them because they're amazing songs. 'Mouth for War' is kind of thrashy, utilizing a more up-tempo groove than most of the other songs. It reminds me of the work on the Cowboys from Hell album, and it just may be the band saying goodbye to their older style. 'A New Level' is one of the best tracks on the album with a crushing main riff and devastating vocals.
Everybody knows 'Walk', so I need not explain it, but it is representative of the entire album. The entire album follows this formula: kick the song off with a killer groove, bring in an instantly memorable chorus while never straying from the groove, then hit the listener with an incredible solo courtesy of Dime, before letting the groove return. Really, the only times the album doesn't follow this winning pattern are for the excellent tracks, the eerily jazz oriented 'This Love', and the classic ballad with a twist, 'Hollow'. And haters may complain about the album sounding too samey, but this is the way an album should be. It should have a distinct style and sound, but have a detour or two to keep things fresh. This album pulls it off fantastically. This band tried an album where almost every song has a different feel, and while a lot of the songs clicked on it, The Great Southern Trendkill didn't have enough focus, and as a result, the album suffered.
Vulgar Display of Power is definitely Pantera's greatest moment, and I'd argue that it is the best groove album of all time. This is a masterpiece, and most people know it. So while Exhorder fans complain about how Pantera stole the sound, I'm going to go listen to Vulgar again, and revel in how much better of an album it is than The Law.
Genre:Thrash
Subgenre:Thrash / Groove Metal
Bitrate:320 k
Size:132.87 MB
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Added:16/05/2012
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