Avenged Sevenfold - The Stage (Deluxe Edition) (2017) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Avenged Sevenfold
Title: The Stage (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Rock, Metal
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 2:10:20
Total Size: 2.7 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Stage (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Rock, Metal
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 2:10:20
Total Size: 2.7 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. The Stage
02. Paradigm
03. Sunny Disposition
04. God Damn
05. Creating God
06. Angels
07. Simulation
08. Higher
09. Roman Sky
10. Fermi Paradox
11. Exist
12. Dose
13. Retrovertigo
14. Malagueña Salerosa
15. Runaway (feat. Warren Fitzgerald)
16. As Tears Go By
17. Wish You Were Here
18. God Only Knows
19. The Stage (Live from London)
20. Paradigm (Live from London)
21. Sunny Disposition (Live from London)
22. God Damn (Live from London)
The seventh studio long-player from the veteran California-based metal ensemble, and their first new collection of music to feature ex-Bad Religion drummer Brooks Wackerman behind the kit, The Stage sees Avenged Sevenfold rolling up their sleeves and delivering an ambitious concept LP. Dropped with little to no promotion -- WWE superstar and Fozzy frontman Chris Jericho leaked the album's original title, Voltaic Oceans, via his Instagram account a month prior to the release -- the narrative concerns itself with the Orwellian consequences of a world struggling to adapt to the myriad complexities of artificial intelligence -- there's even a spoken word appearance by celebrity astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. Despite some forays into Floyd-ian space rock -- the soloing in the orchestra-driven "Roman Sky" is positively Gilmour-esque -- the 11-track set mostly sticks to the kind of propulsive, melodic carnage that fans have come to expect from the group, albeit with a progressive metal twist. Avenged Sevenfold may have expanded their sonic horizons, but The Stage is more Operation: Mindcrime-era Queensrÿche than it is Muse, and for all its opining on nanotechnology and interstellar travel, it still feels rooted in heavy metal tradition. ~ James Christopher Monger