Cold - Year of the Spider [Clean]

2




Album Details

Title: Year of the Spider [Clean]
Artist: Cold
Release Date: 4/29/2003
Re-Released On: 5/13/2003
Label: Interscope Records
UPCs: 602498001028, 606949364120
Genre: Rock
Styles: Heavy Metal, Alternative Metal, Post-Grunge
Moods: Cold, Aggressive, Angry, Harsh, Menacing, Rebellious, Bittersweet, Brooding, Cathartic, Confrontational, Detached, Earnest, Fiery, Gloomy, Hostile, Intense, Manic, Nihilistic, Paranoid, Plaintive, Refined/Mannered, Searching, Volatile, Dramatic, Melancholy, Reflective
Total Copies: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Remedy
  2. Suffocate
  3. Cure My Tragedy (A Letter to God)
  4. Stupid Girl
  5. Don't Belong
  6. Wasted Years
  7. Whatever You Became
  8. Sad Happy
  9. Rain Song
  10. The Day Seattle Died
  11. Change the World
  12. Black Sunday
  13. Kill the Music Industry

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDInterscope Records000000702
2003CDInterscope Records000000710

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

While no less a nu-metal authority than Fred Durst was their original benefactor, Jacksonville's Cold has always had a secret weapon in its heavy rock arsenal: mouthpiece. It's mouthpiece Scooter Ward's powerful singing -- not shouting or rapping, like so many of his contemporaries -- that distances he and his mates from the pack. This doesn't mean they're better; indeed, Cold's first two releases weren't consistently strong efforts. However, with the release of Year of the Spider, Cold has placed more emphasis on atmospherics, centered itself behind Ward's lyrics, and has even collaborated with Weezer. While these moves might alienate some metalheads out there, it's a great way of surviving the coming day of judgment, when the bell will toll for all but the best of the nu-metal moaners.

Year of the Spider was produced by Howard Benson, who's best known for masterminding P.O.D.'s triple-platinum Satellite. Just as that group tempers its pummeling rhythms with passionate lyricism, so Benson has massaged the aggro-metal of Cold's initial releases into a better framework for Ward's gruff croon and deeply personal lyrics. Grappling with a family crisis, Ward pleads bitterly and openly in "Cure My Tragedy (A Letter to God)": "If you make the world a stage for me then I hope that you can hear me scream," he sings. "Don't take her smile away from me she's broken and I'm far away." It's arresting to hear such defiant honesty in a genre that, despite its reliance on depressing themes and personal rage, too often is maligned by its own acrimony. "Wasted Years" reaffirms this sentiment. An ambitious, acoustic-driven ballad accentuated by a full string section, the song builds with Ward harmonizing over specters of himself, repeating the song's desperate words until the final couplet. "It's not hard to fail/It's not easy to win."

While this sort of impassioned lyricism can easily become a cliché, it's a credit to Ward's talent as a singer that he sells it. Sure, he sounds too much like Maynard James Keenan, and often seems like the emotional twin of Aaron Lewis. And in its new, more tuneful configuration, Cold can at times approximate the populist alt-rock of Bush. But none of this diminishes the fact that, in the bombastic, one-dimensional world of nu-metal, Cold's regeneration as a melodic, vocal-driven metal band helps it stand out, and will likely help it survive when the industry inevitably pushes away from the post-grunge table. Ward co-wrote the standout single "Stupid Girl" with Weezer's Rivers Cuomo, and while nothing else on the record features as hooky a chorus, the appearance of Dollshead vocalist Sierra Swan livens up the otherwise dour "Suffocate." (The move toward female vocal contributions in metal, illustrated best by the success of Evanescence, is an encouraging trend toward levity.) Year of the Spider is still bruised with the clichés that burden so many releases in this genre. But the dreary purples, blues, and blacks have faded just enough to reveal a band who isn't as concerned with anger and volume as it is with emotion and melodic breadth. [Year of the Spider is also available in a clean version.] ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Adam DanielDigital Editing
Ana LandauerViolin
Armen KsadjikianCello
Casey StoneRecording, Engineer
Chris Lord-AlgeMixing
David LowCello, Contractor
David SpeltzCello
Deborah LurieSynthesizer Strings, Strings, String Arrangements, Conductor
Eric MillerDigital Editing, Engineer
Evan WilsonViola
Fred DurstA&R
Howard BensonPiano, Soloist, Programming, Producer, Keyboards
Jason HarterDesign, Art Direction
Jason LaderDigital Editing
Jenn LittletonA&R
Jordan SchurExecutive Producer, A&R
Julie GiganteViolin
Kelly HayesGuitar
Les ScurryProduction Coordination
Mark RobertsonConcert Master
Martie MuhoberacProduction Coordination
Michael ValerioBass
Mike PlotnikoffRecording, Engineer, Digital Editing
Olaf HeinePhotography
Phillipe LevyViolin
Roland KatoViola
Sam McCandlessDrums
Samuel FischerViolin
Scooter WardVocals
Sierra SwanVocals
Simon OswellViola
Songa LeeViolin
Ted JensenMastering
Terry BalsamoGuitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric)
Vince JonesDigital Editing

Member Reviews

Becky W. (jr8budcrazy) wrote on 6/15/2008...

This also has a DVD that came with the CD