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Bullet the blue sky sepultra
Bullet the blue sky sepultra












bullet the blue sky sepultra

But I got this cheap and by accident so if by chance you'll be put in a similar situation and you're not starving for food - don't hesitate to pick this up.

Bullet the blue sky sepultra download#

You can easily download Sepultura's cover of "Piranha" somewhere in the wide world web. So is this album worth your money? Probably not. The last track is the true highlight of this entire album and I already discussed it at the start of this review so there's no need to reiterate. They just made a boring rock song a heavier but still boring song. Thus, Sepultura's cover of this song didn't work for me as they didn't add anything new to it.

bullet the blue sky sepultra

I consider myself a U2 fan and despite this, I have never liked "Bullet the Blue Sky". "Mountain Song", a Janes' Addiction original, works well as it sounds like a heavy alternative rock track with ringing guitars that don't try to sound metal. The mood shifts positively on the next track which is a cover of Devo's "Monggoloid", an upbeat track that kicks into hardcore high-gear as it closes. Public Enemy's "Black Steel." witnesses the Sep's foray into rap metal - and that can't be good right? Right. While obviously heavier and given the 'Sepultura treatment', it's a dragging and unexciting song. From the headbanging beginning, the mood immediately tapers off on track two with their cover of Massive Attack's "Angel". For a second, I thought Max had done guest vocals. At first I didn't even recognize that it was Derrick Green doing vocals on this track. "Messiah", a Hellhammer cover, open things up and starts this album up on a positive note with its heavy handed riffing and powerful drum beats. There's still the other tracks to discuss. The skill is there but they lack the willingness so it seems.īut alas, that's just the last two songs on the CD. The uncredited track 8 teased me some more as the faint opening strains of Metallica’s "Enter Sandman" soon morphed into the wicked thrash riff of "Fight Fire With Fire" before it faded and left me shaking my head in dismay on what could've been had the Seps' completed the track. Listening to this track makes me imagine Beneath the Remains-era Sepultura being transported to the modern day setting. They proved it here on their all-covers album Revolusongs with their perfect, dare I say it, better than the original rendition of Exodus' "Piranha". Yes, Sepultura can still thrash with the best of them.














Bullet the blue sky sepultra