Disco de Foo Fighters: “Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace”
 Descripción (en inglés) :
Foo Fighters: Dave Grohl (piano); Taylor Hawkins (background vocals); Nate Mendel.
<p>Additional personnel: Kaki King, Pat Smear (guitar); Brantley Kearns Jr. (fiddle); Rami Jaffee (accordion); Drew Hester (percussion); Chris Shiflett.
<p>ECHOES, SILENCE, PATIENCE & GRACE, the Foo Fighters' sixth effort, upholds the band's allegiance to melody-heavy post-grunge power pop driven by roaring guitars and Dave Grohl's fine songwriting. The Foos are aided by super-producer Gil Norton this time out (Norton also helped craft the group's second, and arguably best, album, THE COLOR AND THE SHAPE). The result is a polished yet powerful outing that proves the Foos have earned their status as one of alternative rock's most reliable acts.
<p>But while tunes like "The Pretender" pack a hard-rock wallop, the real surprises on ECHOES are the softer songs. The breezy, folky "Summer's End," for example, is a standout, as is Grohl's solo acoustic performance on "Stranger Things Have Happened." This isn't to say the Foo Fighters have mellowed--the album contains as much amplified snarl as any of their others--but here the quieter moments rival the rockers, revealing a band whose intimate, earnest moments are as convincing as their head-banging ones.
Lista de temas :
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Pretender, The |
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Let It Die - (with Kaki King/Pat Smear) |
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Erase/Replace - (with Rami Jaffee/Drew Hester) |
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Long Road to Ruin - (with Rami Jaffee/Drew Hester) |
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Come Alive - (with Rami Jaffee/Drew Hester) |
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Stranger Things Have Happened +Video
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Cheer up, Boys (Your Make up Is Running) - (with Drew Hester) |
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Summer's End - (with Drew Hester) |
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Ballad of the Beaconsfield Miners - (with Kaki King) |
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Statues - (with Rami Jaffee/Brantley Kearns Jr.) |
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But, Honestly - (with Rami Jaffee/Drew Hester) |
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Home +Video
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Información del disco :
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Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace |
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UPC:886971151626
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Formato:CD
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Tipo:Performer
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Género:Rock & Pop - Alternative
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Artista:Foo Fighters
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Productor:Gil Norton; Rich Costey (Compilatio
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Sello:RCA Records (USA)
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Distribuidora:BMG (distributor)
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Fecha de publicación:2007/09/25
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Año de publicación original:2007
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Número de discos:1
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Length:51:7
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Mono / Estéreo:Stereo
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Estudio / Directo:Studio
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Ron (Jersey) - 25 Septiembre 2007
42 personas de un total de 50 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- 4 1/2 Stars
This isn't a perfect album, or even the best Foo Fighters album in my opinion, but it is a damn good rock album. The Foo Fighters usually change things up from album to album. Some people like the balls out rock, while others like them when they lean toward pop, and still others like the acoustic Foos. This album has a little of everything. So if you like Dave screaming his voice out, then there is a song or two for you. A number of really catchy songs, I really enjoyed the album all the way through. The only exception was the last track "Home", which is just Dave and a piano. That one kind of dragged for me. Other than that, terrific classic rock album. One quick note is that if you buy the album from iTunes you will get a bonus track "Once & for All".
5 personas de un total de 5 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Best release of 2007
i purchased this album the day it hit the shelves. Dave Grohl just keeps getting better. After last years acoustic release the Foo Fighters took a break for the holidays and began the follow up. Gil Norton who produced the Foo Fighters masterpiece 'The Colour and the Shape' is back on board and does a great job as usual. What they did in my opinion here is they took elements of there acoustic stuff and the full on rock tracks and brought everything together and it works. There is a little bit of something for everyone. Straight up rockers like 'The Pretender' to the pop sounds of the great 'Statues'. Every track is top notch with what just may very well be the best Foo Fighters song to date, Long Road to Ruin. Long Road has a great hook and a chorus you will find stuck in your head through out the day, my five year old even loves it. Another great thing is the addition of piano, and no surprise who plays it , yes Dave Grohl. Dave is turning out to be one of the best song writters this decade and of course one of the best all around musicians in rock history. Do yourself a favor and pick this up, it just fits this time of year, it just has a very fall like vibe about it. I give 5 stars plus, hands down the best release of 2007.
4 personas de un total de 4 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Deliciously crafted album
9.25.07 REVIEW: Foo Fighters~ Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace?
Excellent album. Very much reminds me of Led Zeppelin III. Every song does something good for me and hopefully you. I am very proud of the Foo for crafting this.
1. The Pretender: Perhaps the best all-around song released to radio in their history. It starts simple and pretty and progressively builds and builds into a dynamic rocker that gets you moving and wanting more. The drumming in this track is perfect. Not too much, not too little, but still present. The song is very good and very hard-charging. 5 stars. 1st out of 12 on my favorite list here.
2. Let it die: I love how innocent it starts and how it draws you in. It is a very clean song (thank you Gil for allowing us to thoroughly enjoy the elements of the music, unlike the last two records) and you just know something bigger is ahead. I love the middle of the song when it goes from mellow to crunchy instantly. Great guitar work, very nice. I read how Shiflett is all over this record....somebody is, I hope it is Shiflett. How can you tell if it is Dave or Chris on record? Obviously Long road to ruin, Summer's end, and But, honestly are Shifty, but this is a little heavier. I love the idea of the Foo allowing Shifty to have more of a presence here. These two songs are a great start to an album. I could do without the blood-curdling screech at the end, but this is a great song. 5 stars. 2nd favorite out of 12.
3. Erase/Replace: To me, this song sounds very TCATS to me. Eveyone wanted that and I think this is the song that sounds most like 1997 to me. I do however, think people need to realize this isn't 1997 or 1999 or 2005. This is a new album. Don't try to say it is what it isn't. Accept the fact that the Foo's are doing what they want and doing it well. Back to this song. I like the energy here. Although this is probably my 2nd least favorite here. 3 ¼ stars. 11th favorite out of 12.
4. Long road to ruin: Very cool sounding song. Very Shiflett themed. I love the bass and the guitar solo is hands down the best we have heard on record from the Foo's. I am glad they made a song that sounds like this. People will here this and feel good. Everytime I hear this I see myself driving with the window's down and the sun visor down with the lady on my side. 5 stars. 4th favorite of 12.
5. Come alive: I was expecting something more, but nevertheless this is a quality track. The acoustic to electric thing definitely reminds me of Led Zeppelin's finest moments. This song is similar to Let it die, but not nearly as good. It does, however have a very neat guitar line in its closing moments. 4 stars. 10th favorite of 12.
6. Stranger things have happened: When I read it was just an acoustic guitar accompanying Dave I wasn't excited. Then I heard the song and fell in love. This was the first song I wanted to hit "repeat". Great lyrics and beautiful guitar work by Shiflett and or Grohl. This is a masterpiece. 5 stars. 3rd favorite of 12.
7. Cheer up, boys (your make-up is running): I had heard live versions of this song and was really looking forward to hearing it in its studio form. It doesn't disappoint as this is what every Foo fan loves: Rocking energy at a frenetic pace while maintaining a great melody. The chorus is both catchy and slightly disappointing. I am a sucker for back ground vocals and incorporating all members, but it doesn't work for me here. That may change the more I here it though. This is a great catchy rock song that will be played at stadiums near you soon. 4 ¾ stars. 6th favorite of 12.
8. Summer's end: Very cool intro and great guitar work throughout. I really like the lyrics of this song and the guitar work. Overall it hasn't excited me as much as I want it to, but it will. 4 ½ stars. 8th favorite of 12.
9. Ballad of the Beaconsfield minors: Granted, it is done for a cool reason, but my God-this song is not very good. I can't play guitar like that, but it just sounds like a bunch of foreign noise. 1 star (only because the Foo deserve a star for making any song). 12th favorite of 12.
10. Statues: I can't understand why people don't like this song much, it is beautiful. Dave sounds great, the guitar work is very good and the piano is outstanding as well. I really like the lyrics here too. Very nice sound that makes you love the Foo even more. The intro sort of gives off a Peter Frampton thing for me. I really like the potential this song brings. 4 ½ stars. 7th favorite of 12.
11. But, honestly: Freaking good song. Really good song. I love the simplicity and the beauty in this song. Another song I wanted to listen to again right away. The electric guitar work in the end is great and feels very mid-summer, sun going down kind of joy. 5 stars. 5th favorite of 12.
12. Home: Very ballsy song in that Dave goes very soft and pulls it off. I for one actually like the lyrical content of this song and the piano is nice. It is a good song to unwind with. 3 ½ stars. 9th favorite of 12.
Overall: 11 of the 12 songs are very good with 8 of them being fantastic in my mind. This may be one of the two most complete Foo Fighters albums and definitely their most wholesome and band-influenced. All four members shine on this disc and other than the ballad, you never lose focus as a listender. This may go down as a classic, it does for me. I can't wait to see these songs played live and I hope they don't hold back on stage with their new music. Ten years ago I was worried about what songs would be singles, now I could care less, but I do hope people from all realms get to hear this great disc.
4 personas de un total de 4 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- "There's a world out there, don't you deny me"
Bought this about a year ago when I first heard "The Pretender" on the radio. The CD was the best one I bought all year and I still play it often. Every track is awesome and there is a lot of depth and variety. There is nothing weak here. It was the first Foo Fighters CD I bought (I know, where have I been?). I knew some of their songs, of course, but never liked any enough to buy the albums until "The Pretender." Since then, I've bought "The Colour and the Shape" and "One By One." Both are great especially with the extra tracks (I'm a Gary Numan and Psychedelic Furs fan, so I was pleased to see them do covers by those artists), but "Echoes..." is still my favorite (the CD title reminds me of the Husker Du song "Charity, Chastity, Prudence, and Hope"). If you haven't bought this yet, what are you waiting for, extra tracks? This one is too good to wait.
"The Pretender"--The song that turned me into a Foo Fighters fan! Rocks and has a unique sound. The lyrics always makes me think of that Sesame Street tune "One of these things is not like the other..." I'm just cooky that way.
"Let It Die"--OK this is getting A LOT of play on the radio. Usually I get sick of songs that get so much play, but this one is so amazing I don't mind hearing it two or three times a day on the rock station. I really like the delicate guitar at the beginning, especially during the repeating "Why'd you have to go and let it die." Then, of course, it explodes! Vocals are excellent, too.
"Erase/Replace"--I like the whiny guitar opening and the high octane riff. Almost punk until it gets to the slower chorus.
"Long Road To Ruin"--Sounds a little more pop and mainstream. I thought it makes a good candidate for a single (which are not always the best songs on the albums, of course), and doing some research, discovered it was the second single. I haven't heard it on the radio which is a good thing because I could see myself getting sick of this one. Good song but probably my least favorite on the CD (besides the instrumental) because it lacks the edge of the other tracks.
"Come Alive"--Nice, relaxing, laid-back track that builds up tempo and explodes at the end. I really like this one.
"Stranger Things Have Happened"--Slow, acoustic number about loneliness.
"Cheer Up, Boys (Your Make Up Is Running)"--Drums kick on this one. The beginning sounds like the song is about to explode but it settles down and turns into a very accessible track along the lines of "Long Road To Ruin" but with an edge.
"Summer's Edge"--This one has kind of a country rock sound: "Sweet Virginia countryside, I will meet you there, bloody lips and cherry wine, moonshine in your hair."
"Ballad of the Beaconsfield Miners"--Very impressive guitar work on this instrumental.
"Statues"--Great track! I like the laid-back feel with the piano and the drums that beef up the sound as well as the lyrics: "We're just ordinary people you and me, time will turn us into statues eventually."
"But, Honestly"--Mostly just vocals and strumming guitar until the other instruments kick in to the repeating "Give it to you." I like the scale guitar solo. This one is not as memorable as the others, probably because it is near the end.
"Home"--Quiet, slow song with soft vocals and piano built up with drum and orchestra. Pleasant way to end an excellent album.
3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- 4-1/2 stars -- Why do Dave and the boys keep winning Grammys? Well, I'll tell you...
Foo Fighters decided to cement their ten-year history with
back in 2005, and although that album was good, it was still the first album from them that I gave less than a four-star rating to (I gave it a three-and-a-half). Now they're back with Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace.
This album illustrates another case where although I like the first single (which also becomes a hit), what I like more is the second single that DOESN'T become a hit -- in other words, my favorite song on the album is "Long Road to Ruin". But "The Pretender" is still damn good, as are "Let It Die" and "Come Alive". This album is also pretty divided, as the more energetic tracks are on the first half of the album (with the exception of "Once & for All", which I think is only on the digital version) while the mellow songs are on the second half. Fortunately, while the songs on the second (acoustic) disc of In Your Honor were so similar that it sounded like an hour of the same song, the production in THIS case is more varied, as "Summer's End", "Home" (the song that inspired the album's title) and "Statues" easily stand out.
Maybe Foo Fighters should work with Gil Norton more often because although they have never made a bad album, Gil was also present on their best album
, and this album is right up there with that one. Pick it up if you haven't already.
Anthony Rupert
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