Disciple - Back Again - 2003
Tracklist
1. Back Again – 3:14
2. Fear – 3:28
3. 103 – 3:51
4. Touch – 3:09
5. Face – 3:30
6. Wait – 5:13
7. Hardened – 2:41
8. Why Don't You Shut Up – 2:45
9. Before You – 3:34
10. Remembering – 3:51
11. Not the Same – 2:53
12. Next Time – 4:03
13. One More Time – 4:50
http://ifolder.ru/8921232
http://speedshare.org/download.php?id=B6D9627812
Disciple - Disciple - 2005
Tracklist
1. The Wait is Over – 2:50
2. Stripped Away – 2:57
3. Into Black – 3:46
4. Only You – 3:09
5. Rise Up – 2:33
6. Worth It All – 3:43
7. Shine Down – 2:52
8. Falling Over –3:47
9. Go Ahead – 3:11
10. Beautiful – 3:10
11. Be the Quiet – 3:47
12. Backstabber – 2:59
13. All We Have is Now – 3:41
14. Tribute – 3:22
http://ifolder.ru/8921308
http://speedshare.org/download.php?id=03FF9C1E2
Disciple-Scars_Remain-2006-MP3
Код: Выделить всё
▀
▄▓▄ ▄▓████▄ ▀ ▄▓▄
▀ ▐▓▓█████▌ ▀ ▄█▓▄ ▀ ▄▓▓▓██▄
▄▓▄ ▀ ▀▓▓███▀ ▄▓▄ ▀▀ ▄▓▄ ▐▓▓█████▌▄▄▄
▀ ▀ ▄▓█▄ ▄▄▓▓▓██▄ ▄▓█▄ ▀ ▄ ▀ ▀▓▓█████▓▓▀▀
▄▓▓▓▓▓▓▄ ▀▀ ▒▓▓▒█████▓ ▀▀ ▄▄ ▄▒▒▓▓█▄ cpN!████▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄████▌
▓▓▒▀▀▀ ▄▄▄█▀▄ ▀▒▓██ ▄▄▄▄▄▄▄ ███▌ ▐▒▒▓▓████ ▀▀▀██████████████▓▓
▐▓ ▄▄▓▓█████ █▄ ███▌▐██████▓▓███▄ ▀▒▓████▀▄▒▓▓█▄▄ ▄▄████▓▓▀▀ ▄█▓▄
▄▓▒▐▓▓██████▌ ▐▌▐██▀ ▄███████▌▓████▄▄ ▀▀▀▒▒▓▓▓███ ▄▄▄█████▀▀▀ ▀▀
▓▓▒▒ ▓▓█████ ▀▄ ▀▄▀ ▄█▀▐██████▌ ▓▓██████▄▄ ▀▀▀▓▓██ ▀▀▀▀████████▓▄▄▄ ▀▀▓▓▄▄
▐▓▒▒▒▌▐▓█████▌ █▄▄██▀ ▐██████▌ ▓▓██████████▓▄▄▄ ▀▀█▓▓▄▄▄ ▀▀▀███████▓▄ ▀▒▓▓
▓▓▒▒▌▐▓█████▌ █ ▀█▄ ▄▀▐▓█████▌ ▐▓█████▌ ▀▀▀███▓▓▄ ███▓▓▒▒▄ ▀█████▓▓ ▀▒▓
▀▓▒▒ ▓▓█████ ▐▌▄ ▀▀ ▄▐▓█████▌ ▐█████▓▌ ▀█▄ ▐███▓▓ ████▓▓▓▒▌ █████▓▓ ▒▓
▓▓ ▓▓█████ ▐▌▐█▓▓▓▌▐▓█████▌ ▐▓█████▌▓ ▐█▄█▀▀▀ ▄▄████▓▀▄▄▓▓▓▓▌▐█████▓▌▐▓
▄▄▓▓█▌▐▓▓████▌ █ ████▌▐▓▓████▌ ▐█████▓▌█ ▀▀ ▄▄█▀▀▀████▓ ▓▓▓████▌▐█████▓▌▐█
▓▓████▌▐▓▓▓████▄▄█▌▐▀▀ ▄▓▓▓▓▓███▄████▓▓▓▌▀▀▀██▀ ▄▄▀ █████▓▓██████▌▐█████▓ ██
▐▓████████▀▀▀▀ ▄▓▓▀▀ ▀▀▀▀▀███▓███▄▄▄▄██▌ ████████████▀ ▄█████▓ ▄██
▄▄███▀▀▀ ▄▄ ▀ ▒▓▓▌ MP3 ▀▀▀███████▄▄ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ▄▄█████▓▀ ▄▓▓▄
▐█▓▓ ▄██▀ ▀▒▓▄ presents ▀▀▀▓█████████████████▓▀ ▄▄█▀██▀
██▓ █ ▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ▀▓█▀
██▓ ▄
███ Disciple - Scars Remain
███
███ Artist - Disciple
███ Album - Scars Remain
███ Label - SRE/Columbia
███ Street Date - 2006-11-07
███ Release Date - 2006-11-07
███ Genre - Rock
███
███ # NAME TIME
███ 1. Regime Change 3:53
███ 2. Love Hate (On And On) 3:32
███ 3. My Hell 3:34
███ 4. Scars Remain 4:32
███ 5. Game On 3:25
███ 6. Someone 3:21
███ 7. After The World 3:36
███ 8. Dive 3:13
███ 9. Fight For Love 2:39
███ 10. Purpose To Melody 3:39
███ 11. No End At All 3:27
███
███
███ 38:51 min
███ 72.66 mb
███ ▄
███ ▀ ▄
███ █ ▀ ▄█
███ █▄█ ▄█▀▀▀
███ █▀▀▀ ▄▄▄ ▄▓█▄
▓██ ▄█▓▓▓▄ ▓▓▓██ ▀▀
▓███████▓▓▌▄▄▄ ▄▄▄ ▀▀▀▄█▓▄ ▀
▓▓██▀██▓▓▀▐▓▓██▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄██▓▓▓▄▓▓██▄██▓▓▀
▄▓█▄ ▄▄ ▀▀▀ ▀▀▀▐▓▓███████▓
▀▀ ▄▓▄ █▀▀ ▀▓▓▓█▀ ██▓
▀ ▄ Release Notes ███
███
███
███
Disciple rocked the masses last year when the longtime indie metal ███
band released their first national record, the self-titled ███
Disciple. Churning out a few smash hits, including the impossibly ███
catchy "The Wait Is Over," Disciple had established themselves as ███
a force to be reckoned with in hard rock music. Now, over a year ███
later, the guys are back with Scars Remain, a ferocious rock album ███
that matches the catchiness of the highlights from their previous ███
efforts, while bringing back more of the vicious roots the band ███
began with. ███
███
Many of the tracks on Scars Remain offer plenty of variety within ███
themselves that alternate between the throat-shredding and the ███
melodious. "Regime Change" opens the record with a simmering intro ███
that soon explodes into a frenzy. The record never strays too far ███
from just being a modern metal exhibit of energy, twisting and ███
turning between the mellifluous and the brutally vivacious. ███
Actually, one thing's evident while listening to Scars Remain, it ███
hardly ever eases off the gas. "Love Hate (On & On)" is sort of a ███
cry out to God over struggles between the two extremes, offering a ███
healthy mix of screaming and singing for a pop-metal anthem, while ███
"My Hell" falls under almost arena metal. The title track breaks ███
out the double bass drums and 80's guitar licks with plenty of ███
modern influence to keep it relevant, especially when Kevin ███
Young's strong vocal tone gives way to complete guttural ███
screaming. "Game On" works in a bit of Limp Bizkit influence for a ███
pounding battle cry, while "Someone" almost touches on speed metal ███
in a way that would have made Staple grin, before the song breaks ███
into a similar song structure and approach as their hit "The Wait ███
Is Over" (but remains an album highlight regardless). ███
███
While much of the album takes a schizophrenic approach to ███
songwriting that keeps the listener guessing where the song just ███
might go next, there's one significant area in which Disciple ███
trips up on Scars Remain: rock ballads. Within the very first ███
second of "After The World," Young's vocals clearly wear a ███
distinct resemblance to the desperate utterances of Nickelback's ███
Chad Kroeger. Heaven knows music doesn't need another Kroeger ███
impressionist (let alone the real thing), and Young's lack of ███
vocal originality steals from the impact of the record. Young ███
proves he's got the pipes to carry a song whether it's crooning a ███
soft melody or letting out a blood curdling scream, so it just ███
gives off a cheapened feel to hear him sing this way. "Dive," ███
"Fight For Love," and "Never Want It" succeed the ballad misstep, ███
and bring the record back to the forceful rock of the earlier ███
tracks (with the latter serving as the perfect example of what it ███
might sound like if Pillar took a few pointers from Common ███
Children). But Scars Remain gives the rock ballad another shot ███
with its softer, more tender closer, "No End At All." While ███
Young's vocals feel more at home on this particular ballad, the ███
music itself feels a bit out of place on Scars Remain, having the ███
album come to a screeching halt, ending on a less impressive, ███
anticlimactic note. ███
███
After the dust clears from its whirlwind, what remains after ███
listening to Disciple's latest venture, is a solid rock album with ███
a few bumps along the way, but ends up being one real extended ███
adrenaline rush from beginning to end. A spiritually bold record ███
that offers a positive message set to a metal soundtrack, Scars ███
Remain is one of the strongest hard rock albums you may hear this ███
Fall. ███
███
███
███
▓██
███
▀ ▀ ▓██
█ █ ▓██
██▄ ▀▀ ▓▓█
█▀ ▄▄██▄ ▄████▀▀
▄ ▓▓█████ █▄ ▄▄▄▄████████▄▄▄▄▄ ▄█ █████▓▓
▀▀▄██▄ ▄▄ ▄▄ ▄█▓▓▓▀▀▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▓██▄▄ ▀ ▄▄ ▄▄ ▄██▄▀▀
▀▓█▀▓▓██████▓▓▀ cpN/cRo.o6 ▀▓██▄ ▄█ ▄ ▀ █████▓▓▀█▓▀
▄ ▀▀▄██▄█▓▌ ▓███▄ ▀██▄▄█▄ ▀ ▄▄▄██▄▀▀ ▄
▀▓▀ ▀▓█▀ ▀▀ ▐████▓ █▀▀▀ ▄▄█▓▓▓▀▀▀█▓▀ ▀▓▀
████▓▓▄▄▄▓▓▀▀▀
▄███▀ ▐▓██▀
▄▓▄ ▄▄▄██▀▀ ▓▓
▀ ▓▌
http://ifolder.ru/8921414
http://speedshare.org/download.php?id=65B326D02
Disciple-Scars_Remain-(Special_Edition)-2007-MTD
Код: Выделить всё
Disciple - Scars Remain (Special Edition)
ARTIST.....: Disciple
TITLE......: Scars Remain (Special Edition)
LABEL......: INO Records
URL........: http://www.disciplerocks.com/
RIP DATE...: Sep-12-2007
STORE DATE.: Aug-28-2007
GENRE......: Hard Rock
QUALITY....: VBR / 44.1Hz / Joint-Stereo
SIZE.......: 92,5 MB
Track Listing:
01 - regime change 03:53
02 - love hate (on and on) 03:33
03 - my hell 03:35
04 - scars remain 04:32
05 - game on 03:26
06 - someone 03:21
07 - after the world 03:36
08 - dive 03:14
09 - fight for love 02:40
10 - purpose to melody 03:39
11 - no end at all 03:26
12 - things left unsaid 03:52
13 - love hate (on and on) (acoustic) 04:04
14 - after the world (acoustic) 03:58
15 - my hell (acoustic) 04:13
16 - things left unsaid (acoustic) 04:12
ДДДДД
59:14 min
Release Notes:
Special Edition with 4 bonus acoustic tracks. Pics included,
enjoy!
Kevin Young - Vocals
Brad Noah - Guitar
Tim Barrett - Drums
Joey Fife - Bass
As a professional rock band, it doesn’t hurt to be prolific, but
it’s far more important to grow and develop -- to learn from past
triumphs and failures and to use accumulated experience to craft
songs that are passionate, modern and from the heart. In their 14
years together, Knoxville, Tennessee band Disciple have matured
from an aggressive metal band to a quartet with a strong sense of
melody and penchant for the unexpected. The band’s last album Rise
Up was full of driving rhythms and tuneful hooks, but with their
new album Scars Remain Disciple have incorporated exceptional
songwriting with a level of intensity they haven’t displayed in
years.
“The songs are a lot heavier than anything we’ve done in a while,”
says singer Kevin Young. “I’m screaming as well as singing and the
songs are so fun to play. We’re very excited to play them live.”
Kevin Young - Vocals
They’re not just powerful, they’re also eclectic. The title track
starts with a chugging rhythm and a muted, repeated lick before
bursting into a powerful riff laden with squealing harmonics,
“Regime Change” weaves and surges through angry buzzing guitars
and an angular tempo before bursting into a sing-along chorus. And
“Someone” charges full-speed into a lightning storm of blazing
guitars and longing vocals, pausing only for a radiant refrain
before bursting into the next verse. But while Scars Remain is
Disciple’s heaviest, most crushing record, it’s also their most
dynamic. “After the World” is a rock ballad awash with acoustic
guitars and harmonized vocals and “No End at All” is slow and
sentimental, flush with pristine musicianship and echoing
production.
“We cover the spectrum musically because we love all kinds of
music,” Young says. “We consider everything our influences --
Michael Jackson, Prince, Stevie Wonder, Bon Jovi, Metallica -- You
name it. We try not to categorize ourselves and we don’t try to
cater to any particular style. We just go with what we feel, and
sometimes it’s real heavy and sometimes it’s kind of slow.”
Brad Noah - Guitar
In addition to featuring strong writing, Scars Remain contains
some of Young’s best lyrics to date. As the album title suggests,
many of the songs are about searching within and examining the
blemishes and baggage that define character and personality.
“As little kids we felt like we wanted to share ourselves with
people and felt like we had something that could really make an
impact on people’s lives,” Young says. “One time, a guy came up to
me and said, ‘Hey man. I’m a dad and I was on drugs and I was
totally lost. Then I went to one of your concerts and got
completely inspired to change my life. I’m not on drugs anymore
and I have a job and I’m actually taking care of my wife and kids
instead of stealing from them.’ It’s so amazing to hear your music
has had that much effect on someone.”
Tim Barrett - Drums
Scars Remain is filled with emotionally resonant songs that invite
change. The title track, for example, is about coping with the
aftermath of trauma and retaining faith in yourself and your
beliefs. “When bad times hit and everything doesn’t go so
smoothly, there’s always a crisis where you question, why am I
here? What am I doing?” Young says. “Life leaves so many scars,
and when you look at them, the scars remind you of what you’ve
been through and how far you’ve come.”
Other songs are equally poignant. “Love Hate (On and On)”
addresses the horrors that occur across the world, but points out
that there are just as many positive things in life that go
unnoticed and “Game On” looks at the role of our nation in times
of war.
“I was thinking about how maybe it’s bad to fight even when
someone has declared war on you and your people,” he explains.
“And then I decided that when someone attacks me, I can turn the
other cheek, but if someone attacks my family, it’s my
responsibility to protect and defend them. And that made me
understand more about the war on terror.”
Joey Fife - Bass
Disciple started writing Scars Remain in January 2005 and by the
end of the year they had finished over 30 songs. In December, the
band entered the studio with producer Travis Wyrick (P.O.D.,
Pillar), who has worked on all seven of their discs, and by early
2006 it was clear that they were on the verge of creating the most
expressive, well-crafted album of their career. “It was really
exciting,” Young says. “We went through second and third drafts of
some of the songs and worked on perfecting them, then we went back
in the studio in June and July and finished everything up. We
couldn’t be more proud of these songs that made the record.”
After recording with Wyrick, Disciple turned the songs over to
engineer Joe Barresi (Tool, Queens of the Stone Age, Judas
Priest), who mixed the album. “He made it sound better than
anything we’ve ever done,” Young enthuses. “It was so rewarding
hearing the final version of the album and going, ‘Man, we did
this.’ Being in the studio is my favorite part of being in a band.
I love creating a song and just watching it grow. Seeing something
that starts as an idea turn into this song with parts, notes and
melodies is really fun and amazing to me.”
Young and drummer Tim Barrett formed Disciple when they were 13
years old. At the time, they were inexperienced and Young’s voice
hadn’t yet changed, but they were determined to succeed, and when
they weren’t in school they spent most of their spare time writing
songs. In December 1992 They met guitarist Brad Noah, whose flashy
playing complimented the band’s heavy vibe.
As a trio -- with Young on bass and vocals -- Disciple recorded 10
songs and recorded an album, which they never released. The next
year, they recorded 12 more tunes, then, in 1995, after they had
been around for three years, they hit a groove. After writing a
batch of much stronger tunes, they entered the studio to record
their debut What Was I Thinking? We were all really proud of that
record and I think that’s the moment where we really hit the zone
as far as writing together and playing live,” Young says. “We just
suddenly clicked and became one big machine.”
Over the next eight years, they recorded and released four more
albums, then in Oct 2003 they hired bassist Joey Fife and became a
quartet. “It felt like we were limiting ourselves live as a trio,”
Young says. “We decided our shows could be a lot better with
another member so we tried out a few people, but we could never
find the right fit. Then, four years ago, me and a buddy were
going bowling with a bunch of guys and Joey ended up in the back
seat of my car. I was talking about needing a bass player, and he
went, “Hey, man. I play bass,’ and I was like, ‘Great. Wanna try
out?.’”
With Fife in tow, Disciple entered the studio in early 2004 to
record Rise Up a powerful, infectious album that perked the ears
of A&R men at major labels across the country. After lengthy
discussions, the band signed with sre Recordsings/Columbia
Records, the company that demonstrated the most understanding of
the band’s life-affirming vision.
“There are so many negative things that go on in life, and so many
bands choose to sing about them and be really angry,” Young says.
“I’m a supporter of freedom of expression and all, but we choose
to express ourselves positively and hope that we can make a real
difference on the world. We really feel like we were meant to do
this.”
http://ifolder.ru/8922032
http://speedshare.org/download.php?id=E28A54D412