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Pillars of Ash
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Album: Pillars of Ash
# Song Title   Time
1)    God's On Vacation More Info...
2)    Desolation in Endless Times More Info...
3)    Bleed On Your Knees More Info...
4)    Born of Strife More Info...
5)    Damned in the Ground More Info...
6)    Beyond the Divide More Info...
7)    Black Tide More Info...
8)    Still Not Well More Info...
9)    Walk Among the Sky More Info...
10)    Punkout More Info...
11)    Leveling More Info...
 
Album: Pillars of Ash
# Song Title   Time
1)    God's On Vacation More Info...
2)    Desolation in Endless Times More Info...
3)    Bleed On Your Knees More Info...
4)    Born of Strife More Info...
5)    Damned in the Ground More Info...
6)    Beyond the Divide More Info...
7)    Black Tide More Info...
8)    Still Not Well More Info...
9)    Walk Among the Sky More Info...
10)    Punkout More Info...
11)    Leveling More Info...
 
Product Description
Product Details
Performer Notes
  • Personnel: Andrew Fidler (vocals, guitar, piano); James May (vocals, drums, percussion); Jonathan Athon (vocals).
  • Audio Mixer: Joel Grind.
  • Liner Note Author: Kim Kelly .
  • Recording information: Cloud City Studios, Portland, OR (10/2014); Falcon Studios, Portland, OR (10/2014).
  • Illustrator: Jacob Speis.
  • Photographer: Geoff Johnson .
  • The Motrhead/Melvins-loving, Savannah, Georgia-based stoner/sludge/punk metal unit's much anticipated sophomore studio outing, Pillars of Ash is a straight-up haymaker of an album; an oil-stained middle finger rising out of the brackish water of a swamp forest. The last Black Tusk offering to feature bass player Jonathan Athon, who passed away in November 2014 from injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident, the 11-track set is both workmanlike and punitive, and its charms are rank and crust-lined. Stand-out cuts like "God's on Vacation," "Black Tide," "Still Not Well," and "Desolation in Endless Times" are blast furnace-forged and spilling over with pit sweat, and what they lack in melody and nuance they more than make up for in pure, groove-laden hardcore goodness. Like their fellow Peach State decibel-pushers Baroness, who also had to overcome a bout with misfortune, Black Tusk have found that the best way to distill despair is via absolute volume, and Pillars of Ash is defiantly cacophonous. ~ James Christopher Monger
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