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Gods of the Earth
Gods of the Earth

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Artist: The Sword
Label: Kemado
Category: Music

List Price: $12.98
Buy New: $8.18
You Save: $4.80 (37%)



New (42) Used (15) from $7.16

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 30 reviews
Sales Rank: 3084

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 71
UPC: 184923000719
EAN: 0184923000719
ASIN: B0014DC0R8

Release Date: April 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • The Sundering
  • The Frost-Giant's Daughter
  • How Heavy This Axe
  • Lords
  • Fire Lances of the Ancient Hyperzephyrians
  • To Take the Black
  • Maiden, Mother & Crone
  • Under the Boughs
  • The Black River
  • The White Sea

Similar Items:

  • Age of Winters
  • Death Magnetic
  • The Formation of Damnation
  • Obzen
  • Attack and Release

Customer Reviews:   Read 25 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Far from the sheltering glens   April 12, 2008
 17 out of 20 found this review helpful

As if their name and albums weren't enough to tip you off, the Sword like to do two things: make references to myths and fantasy, and blast your ears off with eruptions of fiery metal.

And in their second album "Gods of the Earth," this Austin band proceeds to do both -- but with greater intensity than in their debut. Not only do they have Black-Sabbath-style muscle and power that sweeps you off like a tidal wave, but also a wild flexibility that only promises to become more hypnotic in the future.

The first song eases you into the music with a nimble, quiet guitar melody... right before that swell of thunderous bass explodes onto the scene, and it turns into a full-fledged metal anthem. But from the way they play it, you can tell that this is just the buildup.

It's followed by the epic buildup and rapid ascent of "How Heavy This Axe," a blazing war anthem ("So many men have fallen/So many more must die/Cut down like wheat beneath the scythe!"), and "Lords'" tight knifelike riffs twined with heavy grimy clouds of bass. And, of course, lyrics that sound like they were written for some enormous high-fantasy novel ("The dukes of the marches have ordered their archers/To shoot all outlanders on sight").

So you have a pretty good idea of what the remaining songs are going to be, and the Sword rushes on through them like a brush fire. A rollicking hard-rocker that simultaneously sounds like a stampede and a car revving, a meditative folk-metal anthem, blazing yowlfests, tribal metal, eruptions of accelerating bass and wild upward-spiraling riffs.

By the time you get to "The White Sea," you'll probably feel kind of dizzy. Fortunately the album finally slows to a stately dark cloud of grimy bass, with one outburst of wailing riffs near the end.

When you get down to it, all the songs on here sound like the soundtrack to some heavy-metal fantasy movie, with a heavy dose of Norse mythology -- lots of bloody battles, mythical goddesses, destroyed ruins, wizards, damsels, legends, creepy forests, and fantastical/mythic stuff like that. And they'll happily blow your ears off too.

"Gods of the Earth" is just as wild, heavy and rock-hard as the Sword's debut album, but they rev up the tempo with this one -- just listen to the speed of "Under the Boughs." We get raw, rough, intertwined basslines race along at sixty MPH, pausing occasionally for the sharp-edged electric riffs, elaborate acoustic bits, and some solid drumming. But the powerful bass playing is what really pushes this epic, fast-moving music along.

JD Cronise's voice gets a bit buried in the mix, but he yowls nicely when you can hear him. The lyrics are probably the weakest point. They're colourful and evocative ("They come with teeth and tusks and talons/They come with horns and hooves and claws/A wailing cry is heard deep within the forest...") but their lyrics get very stilted at times ("Our legends tell of weapons/Wielded by kings of old/Crafted by evil wizards/Unholy to behold").

In fact, they're at their strongest when they don't try too hard, such as in the relatively simple "Maiden, Mother and Crone": "Walk not down that road/I can not tell you where it goes/Ask me no more questions/Some things you weren't meant to know."

"Gods of the Earth" suffers from some awkward lyrics, but their muscular, blazing, D&D-geeky brand of metal is almost powerful enough to drown that out. Definitely worth hearing.



2 out of 5 stars 5 Stars? Come on.....   June 17, 2008
 10 out of 28 found this review helpful

There is absolutely no reason this album warrants 5-stars. That is, unless you're totally new to the 'stoner rock' music scene and believe that Green Day is also the epitome of Punk Rock. The Sword do to metal what Green Day did for punk rock in 94 except that Green Day actually paid their dues for a few years before they became teenage poster darlings.

The Sword don't bring anything new to the table. Their live show is probably one of the most boring live acts I've seen in years and they certainly don't blow anyone away on their sophomore release. Granted it's a notch above the High On Fire worship of Age Of Winters but now these Austin-Indie kids want to show you they're reaaaally metal and can harmonize with their neat Orange amps and sparkle Ludwig drums. With no more money to be made in post-punk, the hipsters set their eyes to the always burgeoning world of metal.

No 5 star review here but I'm sure Jane Magazine will say:

"Wow, neat! It sounds like Black Sabbath but the band members are all cute so check out , gals!"




5 out of 5 stars Long Live the Sword   April 1, 2008
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

I'm not a big fan of metal by any means but I love The Sword. Their metal riffs are amazing and there is something about their music that I just can't resist. If you liked their first album you'll love this album. Don't hesitate to buy now.


3 out of 5 stars Not as good   April 11, 2008
 7 out of 10 found this review helpful

The first and most appropriate description of this album is that it is "fast." Every song on this album is as fast or faster than anything on Age of Winters. It starts off strong with the intro track but as soon as the second song starts it's obvious that the doom influence is out. Instead, they are leaning much closer to a High on Fire metal type of sound. The singing style has completely changed to match the new, faster style of playing. Now instead of slow-building power found in most songs, it is more of a straight ahead rock sound. The vocals now have a similar quality to Clutch. This album is completely different from what came before.
There are a few stand out songs: namely the two minute intro called "The Sundering" along with "Maiden, Mother & the Crone" and "The Black River" which both appear towards the end of the album. The second through sixth track are all no match for The Sword's previous effort.



5 out of 5 stars Deafening, Ear-Bleeding Sonic Assault!!   April 2, 2008
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Dude, two words.. Freakin' amazing! In my opinion, this a major stem up from Age Of Winters. Not that AOW was bad, it was amazing, its just that The Sword really raised the "sword" to a new level. You can really see the path these guys are going to take into the future. The second the rediculously heavy guitars in "The Sundering" were registered in my brain, i knew that this album was a classic in the making. These guys are the next Sabbath equivalent, so be ready for these guys to destroy the charts after the next few albums. There is not a boring, slow, or bad song on this album. It is worth the $10 amazon offers for this CD. Buy into the hype, cuz its true. Now don't waste another second w/o this CD!!!!! BUY IT NOW!!

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