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Winds of Plague the Great Stone War Album Art

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Cover art for The Great Stone War by Winds of Plague

Artist Winds of Plague
Type Album
Released 11 August 2009
RYM Rating ii.65 / 5.0 0.five from 236 ratings
Ranked #1,412 for 2009
Genres

Deathcore
Symphonic Metallic

Descriptors

heavy, war, melodic, ballsy

Language English
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  • 3 Soldiers of Doomsday 4:06

  • 4 Approach the Podium three:40

  • 10 The Great Stone War 4:17

  • Total length: 37:17

Previous in discography: Decimate the Weak

Next in discography: Decimate the Weak

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To rate, slide your finger across the stars from left to right.

  • Mitch Lucker
    featured9 , vocalsnine
  • John Mishima
    featuredvi
  • Martin Stewart
    featured2

Winds of Plague don't sound that much similar winds of plague anymore.

Published

I remember I preferred this to the first anthology generally. Maybe could've done with a little more variety but I notwithstanding enjoyed it a lot, I'd come up dorsum to this one for sure. Symphonic deathcore.

Published

Winds of Plague is just another cookie cutter deathcore ring which will ultimately cease to exist and exist forgotten in one case the deathcore scene has moved on. Winds of Plague'southward but prospects are to gain temporary mainstream success with the scene kids. The album itself is cheesy at best and its attempts at symphonic sounds are too terrible.

Published

The style known every bit Deathcore is one that is far from my favorite sub genre of Heavy Metallic. Well-nigh bands in the genre regurgitate the same depression riffs, abuse the same ethics in their lyrics and seem to all use the same three vocalists.
I was a large fan of "Decimate the Weak" just as one reviewer put it, it was prematurely mature. But now with "The Great Stone War," nigh of the elements that needed tweaking and refining accept been tweaked and refined, and nosotros are treated to a metal monster the likes of which we accept never seen.
The only reason I am not awarding it 5 stars is because goose egg is perfect and at that place is ever room for potential comeback. The Keen Stone War is a very potent and convincing effort that only reinforces the fact that Winds of Plague remains as one of the more promising forerunners of this genre.

Published

If y'all haven't read my review for Winds of Plague'south Decimate the Weak the basic gist of it was that I found them to be quite outrageous with how they present themselves, however the fact that they add a little chip of symphonic metal in their music was good plenty for me to mind to them over and again. The next logic step was to check out the album that would follow Decimate the Weak to see if it would be similar merely so I can have more than merely one anthology past the band. The Great Rock War is an anthology by Winds of Plague that is a lilliputian bit different than Decimate the Weak in a way that it ditched some of the odd stuff in favor of something that is more focused.

Since I have heard of Winds of Plague before, granted that it was merely one album and I didn't even carp with their debut album considering of the fact that it was on a different label and has a low rating here, I would look this anthology to be something similar. The Smashing Stone State of war is an album that is based around a concept, as y'all can tell by the album artwork of a knight duking it out with some sort of animal warrior, and the concept is played out nicely as seen in the intro and the endmost rail. The invitee vocals are more well-known this time around (I couldn't recognize a single guest on the previous album), as the respective singers from Suicide Silence and Hatebreed guest on a couple tracks for this anthology. The music itself has improved a bit from their previous attempt, information technology is more solid and the anthology as a whole is a stride up from Decimate the Weak even though it might not take those tracks that stand out every bit much (maybe a lack of music videos for this anthology).

I similar this anthology more than Hatebreed for the simple reason that it has more cool stuff on it. Tin't wait for their future albums.

Sound Off!

Published

Tack on some keyboards to accomplish the symphonic event is pretty creative.

Published

Yeah, good stuff, simply it's getting to bespeak now where you're sitting listening to this and wondering "does this actually mean anything to me?". Listening to The Great Stone War, I was impressed, but not engaged.

Published

Nearly every bit proficient as Decimate the Weak, just missing something...

Further listens will aid support my statement that this album is kick-ass, even if it's Deathcore.

Winds of Plague has one time again proven to us that they are one of the but last hopes in the Deathcore field.

Published

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Ratings: 236

Cataloged: 130

Track rating sets: Rail ratings: 5

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