In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3

Columbia Records

Occupation

  • Vocals, Guitar: Claudio Sanchez
  • Guitar: Travis Stever
  • Bass: Michael Todd
  • Drums: Joshua Eppard

In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 is the second studio album by American progressive rock band Coheed and Cambria. It tells the third part of the band The Amory Wars concept and was released in October 2003, Equal Vision Records and Columbia Records.

Creation and publication

The debut album The Second Stage Turbine Blade was followed by numerous concerts in the United States. The second album was recorded in Woodstock, New York. As a guest musician Danny Louis (keyboards), Avalon Peacock, Julia Nichols and Rachel Havens were involved (all vocals). From May 2010, set to music on the album third installment of the sci-fi saga The Amory Wars was released as a comic book series.

Title list

The three parts of The Camper Velourium were called to the first pressing of The Velourium campers. The nameless pieces twelve to 22 there are a total of slightly more than one minute silence.

Style

Coheed and Cambria play on the album, modern and straight progressive rock with influences from Glam Rock, Hard Rock and Heavy Metal of the 1970s as well as from modern varieties of Alternative Rock, Progressive Metal, Emo and post-hardcore. There are occasionally drawn comparisons to bands like Queen, T. Rex, The Cars, Thin Lizzy, Rush, Jets to Brazil and The Mars Volta. The melodies are catchy and often have pop appeal, the song is high.

Reception

The album was well received by the press, reached number 52 in the U.S. charts and was awarded by the RIAA with a gold record. Although David Serra of Allmusic criticized the band had their goal is to create an epic album missed. Finds Christian Rode of the Baby Blue Pages, however, " [ t] he disc rocks totally cool " and it has " nothing to complain ". Peter Kubaschk of powermetal.de recommends In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 " just all friends of exciting new albums that are progressive and something truly new in the true sense of the word. And these are then likely to soon be captured by the fascination of this album. That's great. "That eclipsed magazine took the album on its list of prog metal milestones.

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