Leviathan
|
| Price: | $8.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
28 new or used available from $5.62
Average customer review:Product Description
Captain Morgan and his wild crew are once again up to no good on the high seas. Hidden within Alestorm's captured loot lies a very prized gem: The latest MCD, "Leviathan", offers 4 exclusive tracks of unique Scottish Pirate Metal that will undoubtedly convince landsmen of the joys of pillaging with a good dose of keyboard melodies, sing-along growls and a mug full of rum. A jolly good time and happy plundering are guaranteed, so let the raid begin! A must-have for pirates and any others willing to sail the Seven Seas!
Track Listing
- Leviathan
- Wolves Of The Sea
- Weiber Und Wein
- Heavy Metal Pirates
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #78544 in Music
- Released on: 2009-01-27
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: EP
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
Customer Reviews
Nautical, Rollicking Awesomeness: Pirates Voyaging New Metal Seas
I was questioning everything I'd heard about this band until about half way through "Heavy Metal Pirates," and then somehow it all clicked. Give the next descriptions their due as I'm not trying to be mean and it all works out in a big way in the end. On first listen, "Leviathan" was okay, the musicianship actually is pretty good. But you get a strange mixture of about four rhyming lyrics and jarring groups of lines ending with "beast," "tail," "name," "grail," / "head," "hell," "morning," "flame," and others. On one hand, it was kind of foolishly cool just to throw lyrics in there and let everyone have their WTF? moment. And another WTF? with a weirdly moaning "oh-oh-oh" refrain." "Wolves of the Sea" was neat, but it sounded a lot like things I used to hear on Saturday morning cartoons. And "Weiber und Wein" was pretty good musically, actually it was d**n good musically, but I couldn't understand a thing they were singing. And then "Heavy Metal Pirates" opens with the worst of metal conventions (over-the-top singing trying to sound metal tough, peeling guitars), but then all of a sudden Chistopher Bowes opens this song up with a keyboard solo that is out of this world. And that's when it all clicked. And I've listened to this thing about twenty times since in just a few days. And I've been noticing all the stuff I didn't notice the first time around. The double bass drums and the keyboard work that leads into the gloomy tone-shift in "Leviathan," the time shifts in nearly all the songs, the awesome militaristic drumbeat opening to "Weiber und Wein" and its practically Scottish rhythms, and the corny tavern music that sounds like bad Red Lobster muzak fare but in the context of "Wolves of the Sea" gives it a maturity and thoughtfulness that it would lack without it. I don't know how, but I've listened to his over and over and over since. Every thing Bowes sings with his pirate cant is awesome, Lasse Lamert and Gavin Harper have some fine guitar work here, and Dani Evans and Migo Wagner provide a consant bass-drum core throughout the EP. One testament to Alestorm's genius is the way they take the way too painfully Euro Eurovision "Wolves of the Sea" piece by Pirates of the Sea (a group of Swedish peformers who wrote the song to represent Latvia in the Eurovision Song Contest of 2008 that was held in Serbia) and turn it into a credible metal piece instead of leaving it as some sort of modern day too-blue take on, if I may say so, The Village People. (If you don't believe me, check out the differences between the Pirates of the Sea and Alestorm version of this song on you tube. Everybody's privileged to their own taste, but I think most everybody will agree that Alestorm strengthened this song for the better.) All in all, this is a blazing EP by a new band that's doing things like nobody else's pirate business. Soon, if they're not already, these guys are going to be pulling the big shows. Before that, just enjoy this uniquely metal voyage of discovery.
Another Stellar Album
Although i wish they had another full album, this is a real treat from the band that (in my opinion) released the best album last year. every track is pure gold, some of the most fun you'll have listening to music. its heavy and sometimes angry, but you just cant take that smile of your thrashing head when these swashbucklers blare through the speakers.
more of a teaser of things to come than a full album, but more than i could've ever hoped for just a year after one of the best albums in recent memory. a must buy for fans of unique metal. if you dig Amon Amarth, Finntroll, Korpiklaani, ect. you will probably love Alestorm. so buy it now, support this fantastic band.
* "Weiber Und Wein" is just a remix of "Wenches and Mead" in german. so technically its just 3 new songs, but when those songs are so great, its hard for one to complain.
Leviathan - more epic in tone than most of their songs, strong instumental focus
Wolves of the Sea - one of their best songs, deffinitely in the top 3, catchy, fun, and heavy
Heavy Metal Pirates - another top notch entry by this consistantly solid band
awesome!
if you love power metal, pirates and good values, look no further. this ep rules!




