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Black Like Sunday

Track Listings
1 Won't Turn Back (3:32)
2 Johnny (3:31)
3 Finished (3:24)
4 Save Us (3:49)
5 Bad Luck (2:53)
6 Screamer (4:08)
7 Working Man (4:22)
8 Danger Zone (3:27)
9 Rock Pile (4:27)
10 Dreams (2:36)
11 Two (2:49)
12 Down (3:43)
13 Black Like Sunday (11:36)
14 You're the Only One (2:15)  



Discography
Black Like Sunday (2003)
Manic Moonlight (2001)
Please Come Home...Mr. Bulbous (2000)
Tape Head (1998)
Best of King's X (1997)
Ear Candy (1996)
Dogman  (1994)
King's X (1992)
Faith Hope Love (1990)
Gretchen Goes to Nebraska (1989)
Out of the Silent Planet (1988)


  Grace Hotel
  Overall rating:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Album Reviews


I offer this review of the most recent King’s X record with the following caveat: They are my favorite band that is still recording today. I am a (huge) partisan of them and their art. I have seen them perform live on several occasions in the last couple of years and own all of their albums as well as a multitude of their side projects. For the uninitiated, King’s X (a trio made up of bassist/lead vocalist Doug Pinnick, guitarist extraordinaire/vocalist Ty Tabor, and drummer/vocalist Jerry Gaskill) is an incredibly difficult band to describe that combines elements of metal, progressive rock, a touch of funk, Beatlesque harmonies and guitar work as good as there is today in the current music world (detect any bias?).

Black Like Sunday is the 10th studio album by the band (a greatest hits compilation was released in 1998 of their Atlantic/Megaforce days that is well worth the purchase for the uninitiated). Instead of writing new material for this latest release, the band recorded songs they had written but never put out. Some of these songs date back 23 years. Songs one through six sound and feel like a typical (if that’s possible) King’s X record with the trademark crunching guitar work and driving rhythm section. As usual, Doug Pinnick’s voice is incredible. The band really experiments with some different sounds and structures in songs seven through 14. “Screamer” features a Middle-Eastern rhythm and vocal cadence until the band lets it rip, complete with some spine tingling screaming that only Pinnick can pull off. Track nine, “Down,” is a real change of pace featuring their trademark vocal harmonies in a noticeably mellower framework. Tracks 10 (“Won’t Turn Back”) and 12 (“You’re the Only One”) are power pop nuggets in a King’s X wrapper. “Johnny” (Track 13) is a 13-minute progressive jam while “Save us” (Track 14) is a pop ditty morphed with the Ramones.
In exploring their back catalogue of unrecorded material and recording it now, the band has given us insight into their evolution. With Black Like Sunday, you get two records in one and it is well worth the purchase. ~David Smola  bullz-eye.com

The legendary King's X are back with the new album, and yet:-), with the same line-up, which remains permanent, immutable, and unfading since the band was formed at the very beginning of the 1980s. Synopsis. Most of the songs on "Black Like Sunday" are about quite an eclectic cocktail consisting of several genres, sub-genres, and styles and representing actually 'the specialty of the house' of King's X. The most pronounced musical species here are Hard Rock, Cathedral Metal, Rhythm & Blues, and Grunge. In varied combinations, with and without the bits of Progressive Rock, these are available on precisely half of the tracks here: Rock Pile, Danger Zone, Working Man, Dreams, Won't Turn Back, and Two (2 to 5, 10, & 11) and, thus, form the predominant stylistics of the album. The strong guitar riffs, tasteful solos of guitar and bass, a solid drumming, and expressive vocals are the main performance features of each of the said songs. The album's title track (1), and also Finished, Screamer, and Bad Luck (6 to 8), present a highly impressive and definitely progressive Cathedral Metal. While these songs are stylistically monolithic, they're compositionally more diverse than all of the other songs on the album, except for Johnny (13). This 11-minute track is the real highlight of "Black Like Sunday" and is filled with everything to be considered the work of guitar-based Art-Rock, which, in this very case, is either harsh or mild in character. There are little vocals on Johnny, so the instrumental arrangements here are truly large-scaled, diverse, and interesting - from any point of view. Also, this is the only composition on the album where passages of semi-acoustic guitar play a really significant role. As for the remaining three tracks, while Down (9) is quite a satisfactory ballad, the Rhythm-and-Bluesy Rock-and-Rolls presented on You're the Only One and Save Us (12 & 14) sound too flashy in comparison with any of the other songs on "Black Like Sunday". Also, the presence of them on the album destroys its quite an integral stylistic picture. However, the biggest mistake about these two songs concerns their location: they stand just before and straight after Johnny. In my view, this amazing gem should have crowned the album by being placed at the end as the closing track, and no crown needs a dubious framing. Conclusion. While a very good effort on the whole, this is not the best album in the band's discography. Nevertheless, all the traditional fans of King's X should be much pleased with "Black Like Sunday". ~progressor.net

 

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