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Lost in the Sound Of Separation (CD/DVD/Vinyl)

Lost in the Sound Of Separation (CD/DVD/Vinyl)

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Artist: Underoath
Label: Tooth & Nail Records
Category: Music

List Price: $89.98
Buy New: $69.56
You Save: $20.42 (23%)



New (22) Used (5) from $44.99

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 34 reviews
Sales Rank: 105118

Format: Limited Edition
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.1
Dimensions (in): 10.6 x 10.5 x 1.3

EAN: 5099923530423
ASIN: B001D25MTS

Release Date: November 24, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Free Upgrade to 1st Class Shipping on Single Cds and Dvds... Regular shipping rates apply for all other items and International orders. All items fully guaranteed. Your satisfaction is our main goal.

Tracks:

  • Breathing in a New Mentality
  • Anyone Can Dig a Hole But It Takes a Real Man to Call It Home
  • A Fault Line, A Fault of Mine
  • Emergency Broadcast: The End Is Near
  • The Only Survivor Was Miraculously Unharmed
  • We Are the Involuntary
  • The Created Void
  • Coming Down Is Calming Down
  • Desperate Times Desperate Measures
  • Too Bright to See Too Loud to Hear
  • Desolate Earth: The End Is Here

Similar Items:

  • The Anti Mother
  • New Surrender
  • All Hope Is Gone
  • Survive, Kaleidoscope
  • Define the Great Line

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
Deluxe Edition CD+DVD+Double Vinyl Box set contains 56 page, embossed black cloth covered, perfect bound hard back book, full length CD/DVD featuring a 40+ minute making-of documentary, 2 sawblade die cut 10" vinyl records (one turquoise marble, one red marble), all packaged in a white cloth covered 4-fold box, hand numbered and signed by Underoath.

Album Description
2008 release by Underoath, the album Lost In The Sound Of Separation is crafted with the help of Atlanta-based producer/drummer Matt Goldman, who helped pour the rhythmic foundation and Killswitch Engage guitarist Adam Dutkiewicz, who lent his experience to help capture the guitars and vocals and encouraged these Warped Tour veterans to use E-bows, reel bows and experiment with delays and effects pedals. The resulting Lost In The Sound of Separation is a mind-blowing song-cycle that resets the notion of what hardcore, screamo or whatever you want to call it, can be. 11 tracks.


Customer Reviews:   Read 29 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Awesome!   January 9, 2009
This is my favorite record this year, I can't stop listening to it. I've been craving something heavy and interesting for a while and this delivers!


4 out of 5 stars Progressing Slowly :)   December 23, 2008
I have been an Underoath fan for years. I actually prefer (Dallas Taylor) Cries of the Past and The Changing of Times more so then the new underoath, But i have stayed with them through the years. I liked They Are Only Chasing Safety, but when i heard Define The Great Line i was very disappointed in what i heard. Most of the songs on the album sounded the same track after track. Scream,chorus, scream, chorus, and End. Now on this album they mix it up and the guitars are not the same sounding in every song. Spencer sings a lot more and Aaron still keeps the melody going. This is truly a good album not as epic as Cries of The Past but this is my favorite album from them since. I know Dallas left and that was a very bad point for Underoath in my opinion, but in this album they have showed me that they still have the energy to make a very good album even without Dallas.


1 out of 5 stars disappointing...   December 7, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a big let down for me. When DTGL came out i was pretty disappointed about what i heard. Some of the songs had almost no structure to them and Spencer's screaming was just random and at times annoying. I hoped that would change with this album but i was wrong. LITSOS is everything bad from DTGL but more. None of the songs have any structure at all. You can't see an intro, chorus, bridge or end to any of their songs. It just sounds like they recorded the band jamming together randomly and then broke up the noise into 11 different tracks. Also Spencer's screaming is constant and doesn't flow with any of the songs. Underoath was good before DTGL but they really went downhill ever since. In my opinion if your a die-hard fan, go ahead and buy this I know you'll be disappointed anyway. For everyone else stick to their older stuff like Your Only Chasing Safety.


5 out of 5 stars very well done....   November 25, 2008
in just a few words of my own...you cant get any better than good
christian metal...and this my friends is good christian metal!.
GOOD JOB AND GOOD LUCK!.



2 out of 5 stars Ambiguous Jams That Don't Make Good Music   November 20, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I've been an Underoath fan since They're Only Chasing Safety. I really LOVED Define The Great Line. I was thinking that if Lost in the Sound of Separation was anything like Define The Great Line, we were all going to be in for a treat. Define The Great Line is such an amazing, broad, sweeping, and deep album.

This album is just more jam and riff driven. It feels like a lot less thought, time, and effort went into it as a whole. If you like to hear bands just pick up their instruments and press record on whatever comes out, then you'll love this album. I prefer it when bands dismiss song after song and riff after riff, until only the best, top-notch material reveals itself. There's no way Underoath did that on this album. It's hard to even tell one song from another, which I LOVED on Define the Great Line, but the same angle on this album just ends up being annoying because the songs never actually sound very different. It's just ambiguous jamming and riffing, and let's throw some drums on it too.

I'm disappointed and I think a lot of fans will be too. The only reason it gets two stars for me is that, like all Underoath albums, they close them nicely with a few good tracks at the end that are more retrospective and less heavy. Those tracks seem to always be great and there's a couple here.


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