Rosetta-A Determinism Of Morality (Review)
Album: A Determinism Of Morality
Release: 25.05.10
Country: USA
Genre: Metal/Experimental
Label: Translation Loss
www.myspace.com/rosetta
Track Listing:
1. Ayil 4:59
2. Je N’en Connais Pas La Fin 6:49
3. Blue Day For Croatoa 6:37
4. Release 5:36
5. Revolve 6:42
6. Renew 6:08
7. A Determinism Of Morality 10:50
“Uncompromisingly beautiful and absolutely devastating, A Determinism of Morality proves to be Rosetta’s most cohesive and trail blazing creation to date. Greatly anticipated and widely revered, Rosetta’s third Translation Loss full length creation solidifies their ascension as one of the most important bands of the decade.”
Review:
So today we have the artist Rosetta, and their recent release “A Determinism Of Morality” from Translation Loss Records. A very artistic album, which is rather refreshing in many aspects. Well recorded and produced this album is an absolute gem, pushing barriers of Metal and experimental styles. Everything is quite solid and well rounded off, I wish there was something to compare it to, but at this moment I don’t really think anything stands close. Unlike most standard metal albums that just beat a riff to death for 6 minutes, and the next nearest transition is the next track, this album will leave your head spinning with all sorts of beautiful atmospheres, from the more aggressive to most uncompromisingly beautiful this album yanks you from each side of your mind. All instruments are here and well recorded, perfect in tone and pitch, not cheap shabby recordings here. One of the most impressive things was the lack of stereotypical inaudible screaming that dominates both genres, there is an abundancy of clear vocals adding multiple levels to each track helping the album bury itself into what may soon be your favorites collection. The only real problem I have is that at times sometimes I think certain tracks could be a little bit more stable volume wise, but beside that there are no major conflicts. And keep in mind, this is a more technical album than most, and what I mean by that is that instead of so much emphasis being placed on the vocals, more attention is paid to each track and all the instruments composing that track, which is a stand out thing considering todayís popularity of bland tasteless music, where everything stands out.
So in conclusion, not for the people looking for a standard metal album, but for those of you looking for something more, this is a definite pickup. Enough said. Great Job guys, I’m looking forward to your future work.
525/666
-Wrath-








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