Clutch - Clutch (2025 Remaster) (2025) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Clutch
Title: Clutch (2025 Remaster)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Rhino Atlantic
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Stoner Rock, Blues Rock, Alternative Metal
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [44.1kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 55:05
Total Size: 668 / 390 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Clutch (2025 Remaster)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Rhino Atlantic
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Stoner Rock, Blues Rock, Alternative Metal
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [44.1kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 55:05
Total Size: 668 / 390 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Clutch – Big News I (2025 Remaster) (05:14)
2. Clutch – Big News II (2025 Remaster) (02:22)
3. Clutch – Rock N Roll Outlaw (2025 Remaster) (02:59)
4. Clutch – Texan Book of the Dead (2025 Remaster) (02:57)
5. Clutch – Escape from the Prison Planet (2025 Remaster) (04:53)
6. Clutch – Spacegrass (2025 Remaster) (06:32)
7. Clutch – I Have the Body of John Wilkes Booth (2025 Remaster) (04:27)
8. Clutch – Tight Like That (2025 Remaster) (04:49)
9. Clutch – Animal Farm (2025 Remaster) (02:01)
10. Clutch – Droid (2025 Remaster) (04:43)
11. Clutch – The House That Peterbilt (2025 Remaster) (03:32)
12. Clutch – 7 Jam (2025 Remaster) (06:18)
13. Clutch – Tim Sult vs. The Greys (2025 Remaster) (04:11)
Review by Jeremy Ulrey
Moving the guitars forward in the mix paid off in spades for Clutch, who continued with their familiar formula of mixing Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath on their sophomore album. Without straying at all from its roots, the band adds a little more funk to its sound à la Primus, which makes for a more consistent set of songs than last time. Not to mention that the stars shine brighter than they did last time around: "Spacegrass" alone should have become an instant classic, but following minor rotation on hard rock stations, the song -- and the band with it -- was delegated a cult status, compared to the likes of contemporaries Coal Chamber and Korn.
Moving the guitars forward in the mix paid off in spades for Clutch, who continued with their familiar formula of mixing Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath on their sophomore album. Without straying at all from its roots, the band adds a little more funk to its sound à la Primus, which makes for a more consistent set of songs than last time. Not to mention that the stars shine brighter than they did last time around: "Spacegrass" alone should have become an instant classic, but following minor rotation on hard rock stations, the song -- and the band with it -- was delegated a cult status, compared to the likes of contemporaries Coal Chamber and Korn.