Gojira Flac



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  1. Gojira Flag
  2. Gojira Facebook
  3. Gojira Magma Flac
  4. Gojira Fallout
  5. Gojira Fallout New Vegas
  6. Gojira Fallout 4
Gojira Flac

Gojira Flag

06/17/2016

Request Gojira - Discography (2000-2012) Download Torrent: Request Gojira - Discography (2000-2012) Description: Gojira - Discography (2000-2012) INFO: It has always been hard to put a tag on GOJIRA, one of France's most extreme bands the country's musical pallet has ever known.

Track NumberTrack TitleTrack LengthTrack Price/Buy Link
1

The Shooting Star

5:42Not available separately
2

Silvera

3:33Not available separately
3

The Cell

3:18Not available separately
4

Stranded

4:30Not available separately
5

Yellow Stone

1:19Not available separately
6

Magma

6:42Not available separately
7

Pray

5:14Not available separately
8

Only Pain

4:00Not available separately
9

Low Lands

6:04Not available separately
10

Liberation

3:35Not available separately
Duration:
43:57
  1. Gojira-Complete Discography Flac cepo69.zip. 4 GB +2 (2008) Gojira - The Way of All Flesh.7z. 178 MB; 0 (2012) Gojira - L'enfant Sauvage.7z. 139 MB +2 (2016) Gojira.
  2. Filename E: MMT GOJIRA 2008 CD THE WAY OF ALL FLESH EAC-FLAC by moduskedi MeTaLMaDNeSS TeaM Gojira - The Way of All Flesh.wav Peak level 100.0% Range quality 99.9% Copy CRC 51497D3B Copy OK No errors occurred End of status repor.
  3. Gojira - Discography D2C581D101B2938D57FB96FB0CE9626747B7F2C5 is 1.46 GB and currently having 220 Seeders and 1 Leechers.
℗ 2016 Roadrunner Records
© 2016 Roadrunner Records
  • Another WorldGojira2020
  • Terra IncognitaGojira2016
  • MagmaGojira2016
  • StrandedGojira2016
  • The Way of all FleshGojira2014
  • From Mars to SiriusGojira2014
  • The Heartwork EP (Explicit)Carcass2020
  • SwansongCarcass2020
  • HeartworkCarcass2020
  • Onset Of PutrefactionNecrophagist2004
  • United In RegretArsis2002
  • A Diamond For Disease (Explicit)Arsis2001

Gojira have existed for quite a while now. The French quartet formed in 1996 as Godzilla, but in 2001, they changed their name to the rōmaji spelling of the notorious Japanese lizard, that is Gojira. Six full studio albums later, they are considered as one of the leading and most loved bands on the metal scene.

Gojira incorporate progressive elements, unique rhythms and riffs, and uneasy atmosphere, encapsulated around a perplexing motif of melodic heaviness. The band’s latest album, last year’s Magma, was inspired by the death of Duplantier brothers’ mother.

We took on ranking the band’s six studio albums, and below is what we’ve come up with.

06. Terra Incognita (2001)

While containing many hints of the group’s future and still being both technical and progressive to an extent, Terra Incognita is also a lot more raw and rough around the edges. Songs like “Love” and “Clone” are extremely pummeling numbers and showcase Mario Duplantier‘s double-bass pedal work quite extensively during the heaviest sections. Of course, even early Gojira material isn’t complete without certain soft interludes to balance out the intensity, with sparse bass-driven “04″ and the two “De Tonnes” songs fitting the bill. None of this stuff is really what makes the record as unique as it is, however; what really makes it stand out is just how bizarre and dark the whole vibe is. Perhaps some of this comes from how isolated and slightly murky the production sounds, but it’s also from the weird experiments that are attempted.

For instance, while “Love” is primarily a very heavy death metal song, the intro is this weird chromatic clean guitar segment that sets a different tone for the song entirely. “Blow Me Away You(niverse)” is another good example; while most of the song is your average mid-tempo song (albeit with a large emphasis toward high screams), a complete instrumental freakout comes out of nowhere with atonal guitar playing rushing forth and odd clear vocal harmonies combining with intimidating growls. It’s a frantic change of pace, but one that’s refreshingly in its unpredictability. Moments like these are what really make the album work.

05. The Link (2003)

The Link, released in 2003, seems to be built upon the vast foundation of its predecessors. There are numerous traces of GorgutsObscura in Gojira’s sophomore effort. In “Inward Movement,” for example, Andreu’s guitar screeches are reminiscent of Gorguts’ “The Art of Sombre Ecstacy,” which features similar leaps in pitch. Several pieces from The Link are also graced with the dynamic flexibility of Gorguts’ 1999 classic. The Link is rarely monotonous, and interludes like “Connected” and “Torii” act as breaths of fresh air between each plunge into energetic entries like “Indians” and “Remembrance.” This variation gives the album a sense of maturity that is not otherwise present in the work of Gojira’s contemporaries. While more than a decade has passed since its release, The Link maintains much of its freshness and is worthy of repeated listens despite the band’s more recent, refined efforts.

As an individual piece of art, The Link is creative and varied. In “Indians,” rhythms are quick and restrained, while “Wisdom Comes” moves freely from a blast beat to a sludgy pace. The album is frequently “chuggy” and heavy, but Gojira’s dedication to variations in speed, energy and tone help to revitalize the ears of the listener before it is too late. “Dawn,” though less exciting than The Link’s other entries, is a good example of this versatility. The song is composed of many different riffs, each with interesting fills and transitions. The chugginess lingers for a bit, but rarely overstays its welcome.

Gojira‘s style, blending Thrash, Death Metal, Progressive music, Groove Metal, and experimental music, is very different from most of the bands today. The Link captures those elements perfectly, and is quite a step up from their debut.

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04. From Mars to Sirius (2005)

From Mars to Sirius focuses on longer compositions while increasing the guitar distortion and heaviness to the highest degree. Also worth mentioning is this record’s special attention to an environmental message, even going as far as making an album cover that looks eerily similar to the logo of the organization Sea Shepherd, which aims to preserve marine life.

The typical Gojira trademarks are all present; you’ve got the low-tuned chugs, a nice variety of tempos, and melodic guitar lines that cut through the wall of distortion. Unfortunately though, the record also emphasizes one of the band’s trademarks a little too much: the repetition. Repetition can be fine if it’s executed tastefully, but here it just sounds like it was incorporated to fill up the running time. While songs such as the aptly titled “The Heaviest Matter of the Universe” and the simultaneously melodic and harsh opener “Ocean Planet” do an efficient job of trimming the fat, songs like “Global Warming” and especially “Where Dragons Dwell” honestly don’t. The latter is seven minutes long, but while the first half holds a nice sludgy groove with some nice vocal variety, the second half is the same riff repeated… over and over and over and over until it fades out. Other songs are guilty of this as well, and it doesn’t enhance them in any way. There aren’t any subtle changes in the songwriting except for a few different drum fills here and there or some vocal shouts, so there isn’t much to invest in.

03. Magma (2016)

Magma has been crafted upon foundations of varying emotions. On the surface you’ve got Gojira simply evolving their hammering sound into more simplistic rhythms, like “Stranded,” while sounding just as heavy as before. But, beneath the surface is a natural ebbing progression that lies deep in the roots of the Mt. Gojira. On “The Cell” and title track you’ve got Mario’s inevitably stellar technicality on drums but it’s the wisps of guitar from Christian Andreu on the title track or Jean-Michel Labadie’s murky bass in the previous song, “Yellow Stone” that boils the intensity towards the special, heated captivation that only Gojira can conjure.

With Magma, the relationship of music and melody is solidified by the sad passing of the Duplantier brothers’ mother in 2015. Compared their brazenly heavy catalogue, this loss has impacted the mood of this album greatly. The intense emotions contort from a slow kindling fire to blazing infernos of rage that characterize the title of the album: something boiling and ready to erupt. The serene intro, “The Shooting Star,” with its longing lyrics of “When you get to the other side, please send a sign” and pensive riffs exemplifies the calmer and reflective side of the album while transitions between imposing vocals and explosive guitar slides on “Pray,” plus the screeching whammy hooks on “Only Pain,” identify the extreme and severe cascade of emotions from the same tragedy. Having been immortalised within this album, Magma feels more like a celebration rather than a mournful eulogy of Patricia Rosa Duplantier.

02. L’Enfant Sauvage (2012)

Gojira Magma Flac

What we have here is the band’s sound finally coming together and reaching a peak lyrically and musically. Instrumentally, more variation is brought to the table, with the chunky guitar/bass duo being balanced out with the aforementioned elegance, with an extra-melodic side producing a nice atmospheric flavor. The album also happens to be among the band’s darkness, only rivaled by The Way of All Flesh; correct me if I’m wrong, but the lyrics seem to convey a sense of freedom and its cost in this world. Songs like “Explosia” and “Liquid Fire” certainly seem to put that concept on display.

The “identity” and “heart” are exactly what sets this apart from a lot of the other work Gojira‘s released; it sounds like Gojira have finally found a sound they’re content with, and songs like the reflective “Born in Winter” and the eerie suspenseful “The Gift of Guilt” sound generally more enticing than previous efforts. Much of the reason is that there sounds like a drive and a flow to these songs; more feeling if you will.

01. The Way of All Flesh (2008)

Gojira Fallout

If From Mars to Sirius brought Gojira to the world’s attention, then this album really cemented them as a major force in the metal sphere. Without doubt upping the complexity and increasing the heaviness of the often groove-ridden songs on the preceding album, The Way of All Flesh is a bold and striking statement that didn’t sound like many other bands at the time of its release and still hasn’t been fully picked clean by the wave of technically adept bands spawned by the djent scene.

What made Gojira‘s breakthrough album great was its vast quantity of huge and sometimes unearthly riffs, so it’s necessary to note that the riffing presence fell a notch here to make way for more rhythmic f**kery and experimentation with other sounds. There are moments of certain death metal extremity (“All the Tears” goes almost brutal death in places), moments of kooky electronic guidance (“A Sight to Behold” creeps off on its own sense of melody in the verses), plus the familiar rumble of Mario Duplantier‘s monstrous drumming and Jean-Michel Labadie‘s guttural bass, while the swooping whale noises that made “Ocean Planet” such a memorable opener are still here, though not in the same quantities. There are very few of the huge groove riffs that kept one’s neck busy in From Mars to Sirius, with more time spent on increasingly heavy Meshuggah-style workouts that involve a lot of polyrhythms and weighty crashes of guitar.

Gojira Fallout New Vegas

As a whole, that means that The Way of All Flesh is Gojira‘s most densely musical album and remains the most difficult to penetrate, even to this day. The longer songs especially go through a lot of development between beginning and end, rarely sticking to strict songwriting formulas unlike some of the shorter songs. There is certainly something progressive in the way that “Oroboros” and “The Way of All Flesh” spend their time, but it is “The Art of Dying” that really shows what Gojira were once capable of in terms of structuring the movement of their music. The tribal build-up is kept short but generates a potent sense of expectation, while the clatter of percussion and some excellent riffs dominate the first half, surprising the listener with spontaneity and sudden twists that rarely happen in a song that stretches to ten minutes. Some verses are repeated with variations thrown in, so there’s a lot to attend to until the song breaks and a majestic riff attends the song to the calm waters of some ambient sounds, making the whole process mirror the subject (this is about the art of dying if you’ve forgotten) and come full circle. However, following that, “Esoteric Surgery” crashes in with the full weight of an almighty groove death riff and you soon become lost in pure enjoyment once again.

Gojira Fallout 4

The Way of All Flesh eclipses it in terms of creativity, songwriting, and thoughtfulness, if not on grounds of pure enjoyment.