Five Finger Death Punch - War Is The Answer (2009)

Posted by Mr.Fingg | Posted in | Posted on 7:17 PM






























Summary:

Artist: Five Finger Death Punch
Album: War Is The Answer
Release Date: Sep 22, 2009
Genre: Pop/Rock
Styles: Heavy Metal
Size: 42 MB

Track List:

01 - Dying Breed
02 - Hard To See
03 - Bulletproof
04 - No One Gets Left Behind
05 - Crossing Over
06 - Burn It Down
07 - Far From Home
08 - Falling In Hate
09 - My Own Hell
10 - Walk Away
11 - Canto 34
12 - Bad Company
13 - War Is The Answer

Link Download:

http://hotfile.com/dl/26091248/5736f9f/097_Five_Finger_Death_Punch_-_War_Is_The_Answer_2009.rar.html

Review:

Five Finger Death Punch stormed rock radio in 2007 with "The Bleeding" (from debut album The Way of the Fist), a powerful, emotionally tense track that matched vintage Metallica-style thrash with a throat-shredding chorus more typical of late-aughts metalcore. The Los Angeles-based band's sophomore disc, War Is the Answer, mines much of the same territory as that breakout song, keeping the flame of the classic '80s Four Horsemen sound alive with snap-tight chugga-chugga guitar rhythms, minor-key, classical music-inspired clean/acoustic passages, and vocals dripping with a James Hetfield-approved combination of sensitive angst and macho defiance. First single "Hard to See" backs a catchy, harmony vocal-laden melody with a syncopated groove so rhythmically engaging it could almost be called funky, while the closing track, "War Is the Answer," takes a headbanging riff seemingly straight out of the Anthrax songbook and uses it to drive home one of several ultra-aggressive sentiments ("To me you're just a cancer/War is the answer"). Elsewhere, Five Finger Death Punch delve into somewhat more diverse sonic territory; "Bulletproof" pairs a throbbing industrial feel reminiscent of late-period Ministry with Yngwie Malmsteen-esque melodic shred guitar solos and a vocal hook that recalls the '80s pop-prog of Asia and GTR, while "Far from Home" is a straight-up power ballad, complete with dramatic strings and a soaring chorus that could sit on a compilation album right alongside any big lighter-waver, from Staind's "It's Been Awhile" to Poison's "Every Rose Has Its Thorn."

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