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New American Gospel

 
Album Review: New American Gospel

  • Artist: Lamb of God
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: September 26, 2000
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The essential signatures of post-Pantera metal are in abundance on Lamb of God's inaugural album (though they had issued a disc under the name Burn the Priest). A veritable cornucopia of double picking and double-kick drumming, New American Gospel provides a mighty oak upon which gritty American metal's faith is maintained, effectively bridging the '90s' insistence upon drill-sergeant technicality and the old school's determined focus on riff construction. Both kick and snare beats are as insistent as pneumatic drilling, and beyond that, they are diamond-precise, riveted flawlessly into place by Steve Austin's Today Is the Day drum-heavy production. Lamb of God plays a brand of heavy -- emphasis on heavy -- metal not unlike Meshuggah having jettisoned some of their mathematical insistence. What elevates this Richmond, VA, quintet's assault above the majority of modern metal is the attention given to constructing definite melody and complete songs; this is a creative act who generally is subordinated by most metallers to the pursuit of heaviness. Lamb of God does both tastefully in the proper balance. [New American Gospel was reissued in 2006 with five bonus tracks.] ~ Patrick Kennedy, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Black Label Lamb of God Lamb of God (4:52)
A Warning Lamb of God Lamb of God (2:23)
In the Absence of the Sacred Lamb of God Lamb of God (4:36)
Letter to the Unborn Lamb of God Lamb of God (2:56)
The Black Dahlia Lamb of God Lamb of God (3:19)
Terror & Hubris in the House of Frank Pollard Lamb of God Lamb of God (5:37)
The Subtle Arts of Murder & Persuasion Lamb of God Lamb of God (4:10)
Pariah Lamb of God Lamb of God (4:24)
Confessional Lamb of God Lamb of God (4:01)
O.D.H.G.A.B.F.E. Lamb of God Lamb of God (5:14)

Credits

Abe Spear (Photography), Lamb of God (Producer), Lamb of God (Main Performer)
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Wikipedia: New American Gospel
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New American Gospel
Studio album by Lamb of God
Released September 26, 2000 (2000-09-26)
Recorded April 15–April 22, 2000
Genre Groove metal, Deathcore[1]
Length 55:29
Label Prosthetic
Producer Aaron Butler
Professional reviews
Lamb of God chronology
Burn the Priest
(1999)
New American Gospel
(2000)
As the Palaces Burn
(2003)
Singles from New American Gospel
  1. "Black Label"
    Released: 2001

New American Gospel is the second album by American groove metal band Lamb of God, released in 2000 on Prosthetic Records. New American Gospel is the first release with Willie Adler on guitar.

Prosthetic Records re-issued New American Gospel in 2006. It is remastered and remixed with four bonus tracks. The remastered version contains a note on the inlay that explains why the sound of the album is less polished than their newer work. According to the inlay, it was in part due to time constraints as well as heavy drinking. It has sold over 100,000 copies in the United States.

Contents

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Lamb of God

# Title Length
1. "Black Label"   4:52
2. "A Warning"   2:23
3. "In the Absence of the Sacred"   4:36
4. "Letter to the Unborn"   2:56
5. "The Black Dahlia"   3:19
6. "Terror and Hubris in the House of Frank Pollard"   5:37
7. "The Subtle Arts of Murder and Persuasion"   4:10
8. "Pariah"   4:24
9. "Confessional"   4:01
10. "O.D.H.G.A.B.F.E."   5:14
2006 Remaster
# Title Length
11. "Nippon" (Japanese release track) 3:53
12. "New Willenium" ("The Black Dahlia" demo version) 3:06
13. "Half-Lid" ("A Warning" demo version) 2:28
14. "Flux" ("Pariah" demo version) 4:24

Song rationales

In the May 2006 issue interview with Revolver about the album re-issue, guitarist Mark Morton and vocalist Randy Blythe talked about the meanings of the song on the album and information about them.

"A Warning"
" 'A Warning' is one of my favorite tracks on that record. People forget now, but it was a little harder to be a fucking weirdo back then, you know what I mean? Now it's not so much of a big deal - you see frat boys with Slayer shirts or Slipknot shirts on, or whatever. But that song was about people looking at you as if you were a freak, metalhead, a punk rocker-whatever—and them being like, 'Oh, my god, what a fucking loser freak!' and you just saying, 'Yes, I am, so screw you.' "
"Letter to the Unborn"
The song "Letter to the Unborn" contains no lyrics to read in the book of the CD. The song indeed has lyrics but, according to Blythe, the song is very personal concerning the death of his daughter with his ex-wife. They were written before she was born. Because of all of this, he didn’t want the lyrics to be reprinted or read.
"The Black Dahlia"
"It seems kind of typical for guys in bands to have a serial-killer fascination. I don't—I just thought that particular Black Dahlia murder case was interesting, and it kind of panders to my film noir, romantic side. I romanticize about that time a lot in my head, and I took that whole story and put it into lyrics, so I could sit around and wear a fedora and smoke unfiltered cigarettes to it later. Call women 'dames' and stuff, you know?" [laughs]
"The Subtle Arts of Murder and Persuasion"
"One of my favorites on the record, and it's still in the set to this day. You can really hear my nerves in cutting the guitar intro to that song—so much so I think we actually had to fade it up a little bit. [laughs] It was a real new piece of me, and it's pretty difficult to play. It's imperfect but it came out really cool."
"Pariah"
" 'Pariah' was written about a certain individual who used to live in my beloved city, the former capital of the Confederacy, who I did not get along with too well. He was a fucking heroin junkie and was just an awful person. I had a couple of unpleasant run-ins with him and he was just a real shitbag, basically. I despised him so much that I wrote a song about him."
"O.D.H.G.A.B.F.E."
Stands for Officer Dick Head Gets A Black Fucking Eye. This song was written about an incident that occurred during the period of Randy Blythe's life spent as a vagrant. At one point, the group Blythe was with were caught in a storm and sought shelter in an abandoned building. A while afterwards police from the San Diego Police Department arrived and violently detained the group. Finally the police took all of them to jail and they were released afterwards. Blythe said the song was about police brutality and he "thanks the San Diego Police Department" for that. The song meaning explains the names at the end such as Kent State, Tiananmen, and Waco.

Personnel

References



 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "New American Gospel" Read more