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by: Hypocrisy
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Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0727361206727
Format: Original recording remastered
Item Dimensions: 20
Label: Nuclear Blast Americ
Manufacturer: Nuclear Blast Americ
MPN: 12067
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Nuclear Blast Americ
Release Date: June 10, 2008
Studio: Nuclear Blast Americ
Disc 1:- Don't Judge Me
- Destroyed
- Edge of Madness
- Public Puppet
- Uncontrolled
- Turn the Page
- Hatred
- Another Dead End (For Another Dead Man)
- Seeds of the Chosen One
- All Turns Black
- Nowhere to Run [*]
- Don't Judge Me [Live][*]
- Public Puppet [Live][*]
- Destroyed [Live][*]
Editorial Review:
Album Description: Produced by the main madman Peter Tagtgren, this 2002 release continues the trend by building upon their solid and unmistakable sound, incorporating more diverse influences while remaining true to their brutal roots. 2002.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Hypocrisy caught a lot of heat when they originally released their 2002 album Catch 22. Longtime fans were quick to charge the band with abandoning their death metal sound and "selling out" or "going nu-metal", despite the fact that Catch 22 was an unbelievably heavy album that couldn't possibly be considered anything BUT a death metal album. Much of that had to do with Peter Tatgren's vocal delivery, which I admit did lean in a nu-metal direction.
Apparently the album's reception has ...
Rating: -
Back in 2002, Hypocrisy released Catch 22, an underrated album that was criticized for supposedly sounding too modern. Frontman Peter Tägtgren even claimed that bands like Slipknot influenced the music on the album. Now, 6 years later, we have version 2 with re-recorded vocals and remastered sound. I can honestly say that I've not heard the original. Maybe it was how his vocals sounded or how his 7-string guitar was tuned that upset some fans, I don't know, and I don't care. This is Hypocrisy, and ...
Rating: -
I think that part of what makes Hypocrisy such a great band is how well they can blend death, black, thrash, doom, gothic, heavy metal and other influences together to make music that is both unique and experimental. Even back in their earliest days with Penatralia and Osculum Obscenum, they were ahead of their time, brutal but with a futuristic thrashy approach. While their contemporaries Entombed and Unleashed have clung onto their older fans from way back when, Hypocrisy have managed to keep ...
Rating: -
I've been listening to HYPCRISY for over 10 years, and they never cease to amaze me. Catch 22 is more interesting metal from these Swedes. Every Hypocrisy album is different in style/flavour/tension, and that is what makes them such a great band. I think every cd they released is worth having. Yes maybe some songs may not appeal to certain people depending on taste, but that is what it's all about when it comes to music...personal taste. And Hypocrisy can please almost anyone's taste (assuming they like ...
Rating: -
How to start... Catch 22 is regarded as the most dramatic sonic exploration in Hypocrisy's dicography. While this may be true, that does not make this album good. Here, Hypocrisy abandons their melodic death roots in favor of a sterile nu-metal sound. They're blatantly trying to sound like Slipknot here, if you listen to the new vocal stylings and the dissonant, downtuned chords. For example, Tagtgren does his best Corey Taylor impression on the hilariously named "Don't judge me." The melodic accessibility ...
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