Customer Rating: Summary: Always Love Comment: They are my favorite band... and this cd was just another example of how multi-faceted these boys are. Customer Rating: Summary: AWSOME POST-GRUNGE SOUND!!!!!! Comment: This release is absolutely the best version of any Post-Grunge sound that I have heard in a while. Seether has for the most part taken over as the leaders of this type of sound and should remain there barring any "Corporate" involvement. I recommend this cd to anyone who is into this type of music. Customer Rating: Summary: An excellent album. Comment: An excellent album.
Metal like metal should be!
I enjoyed most of the songs (except those with to much bad language...).
Customer Rating: Summary: my new favourite band Comment: I bought the album, threw it into my car cd player and haven't stopped playing it yet - it's on permanent rotation! There isn't a bad song on the album. The lyrics this band writes, as promised, are great and the instruments back them up. Wow! Can't wait to get all their albums now. Heavy, fun, thoughtful, what metal should be in 2008. Customer Rating: Summary: Awesome CD Comment: I love this CD, every track is great. There are no crappy tunes on this one!
Seether returns with another workaday outing that rocks like late 2001. Finding Beauty in Negative Spaces is virtually interchangeable with any previous Seether disc, as well as pretty much anything by the likes of Nickelback, Shinedown, and other "post-grunge" rock bands. True, "Fake It" has zeal, and "Rise Above This" may very well provide the soundtrack to late-night, soul-searching sessions for teenagers from Cape Cod to Cape Town. Shaun Morgan’s often unnecessarily profane lyrics are another problem. Witness the gauche "FMLYHM," which borrows from lyrical ideas that sounded novel when Trent Reznor sang them in "Closer" more than a decade ago but now just sound juvenile and unnecessarily angry. Same goes for the numbing epic "No Jesus Christ" and the closer, "Waste." Throughout, the band shows a lack of imagination that may ultimately prove fatal. In all, this is cookie-cutter rock that really doesn’t. --Jedd Beaudoin