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In the Arms of God
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In the Arms of God
Current price: $48.99
Barnes and Noble
In the Arms of God
Current price: $48.99
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Prior to
Corrosion of Conformity
's 2005 release,
In the Arms of God
, many fans wondered if the group was over. After all, it had been a long time since the band had issued a studio set (2000's
America's Volume Dealer
). During this extended break, singer/guitarist
Pepper Keenan
did double duty in
Down
(2002's
Down II: A Bustle in Your Hedgerow
), and of course, had a much publicized tryout for the vacated bass position in
Metallica
(as seen in the indulgent
Some Kind of Monster
docu-film). But now
COC
is ready to roar once more, and the group does so on their eighth studio album overall. Joining
Keenan
once more are other mainstays
Woody Weatherman
(guitar) and
Mike Dean
(bass), as well as a big surprise on drums --
Galactic
timekeeper
Stanton Moore
. To prime themselves for the sessions, the group immersed themselves in old
hardcore
and
metal
albums they hadn't listened to in years, and the approach worked, as
is a straight-ahead and raw set. The beginning of the album opener
"Stone Breakers"
closely resembles a
Tony Iommi
-led
Sabbath
jam, while such other ragers as
"Paranoid Opioid"
"Never Turns to More"
are classic
. Along with
Black Label Society
,
continue to wave the biker
flag high. ~ Greg Prato
Corrosion of Conformity
's 2005 release,
In the Arms of God
, many fans wondered if the group was over. After all, it had been a long time since the band had issued a studio set (2000's
America's Volume Dealer
). During this extended break, singer/guitarist
Pepper Keenan
did double duty in
Down
(2002's
Down II: A Bustle in Your Hedgerow
), and of course, had a much publicized tryout for the vacated bass position in
Metallica
(as seen in the indulgent
Some Kind of Monster
docu-film). But now
COC
is ready to roar once more, and the group does so on their eighth studio album overall. Joining
Keenan
once more are other mainstays
Woody Weatherman
(guitar) and
Mike Dean
(bass), as well as a big surprise on drums --
Galactic
timekeeper
Stanton Moore
. To prime themselves for the sessions, the group immersed themselves in old
hardcore
and
metal
albums they hadn't listened to in years, and the approach worked, as
is a straight-ahead and raw set. The beginning of the album opener
"Stone Breakers"
closely resembles a
Tony Iommi
-led
Sabbath
jam, while such other ragers as
"Paranoid Opioid"
"Never Turns to More"
are classic
. Along with
Black Label Society
,
continue to wave the biker
flag high. ~ Greg Prato