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Take Me Back to Eden
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Barnes and Noble
Take Me Back to Eden
Current price: $11.89
Barnes and Noble
Take Me Back to Eden
Current price: $11.89
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Size: CD
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The third album from idiosyncratic U.K. band
Sleep Token
completes the trilogy that began with their 2016 debut full-length,
Sundowning
, and presents the cleanest articulation to date of their part-metal, part-R&B, all-chaotic sound. One of the most interesting challenges
presents is figuring out exactly how to listen to them. Over the course of a single song like "The Summoning," the band quickly zips from doomy downtuned metal riffs to choruses with passionate falsetto R&B crooning, then straight to a technical breakdown somewhere between djent and prog metal. Attuning one's listening to these rapid changes between violently disparate styles can be one of the most enjoyable things about trying to keep up with
Take Me Back to Eden
. It's never a guarantee that sections of pummeling drums and guitars won't be followed seconds later by fantastical synths or thick, sleazy funk grooves -- all within the same song. Tunes like "Vore" and the especially epic title track are great examples of this complex approach as well, with the latter not quite sure how to make up its mind between nearly rapped verses and moody pop choruses on par with
Imagine Dragons
. ~ TiVo Staff
Sleep Token
completes the trilogy that began with their 2016 debut full-length,
Sundowning
, and presents the cleanest articulation to date of their part-metal, part-R&B, all-chaotic sound. One of the most interesting challenges
presents is figuring out exactly how to listen to them. Over the course of a single song like "The Summoning," the band quickly zips from doomy downtuned metal riffs to choruses with passionate falsetto R&B crooning, then straight to a technical breakdown somewhere between djent and prog metal. Attuning one's listening to these rapid changes between violently disparate styles can be one of the most enjoyable things about trying to keep up with
Take Me Back to Eden
. It's never a guarantee that sections of pummeling drums and guitars won't be followed seconds later by fantastical synths or thick, sleazy funk grooves -- all within the same song. Tunes like "Vore" and the especially epic title track are great examples of this complex approach as well, with the latter not quite sure how to make up its mind between nearly rapped verses and moody pop choruses on par with
Imagine Dragons
. ~ TiVo Staff