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Darkthrone - Sardonic Wrath

Darkthrone : Sardonic Wrath
Artist: Darkthrone
Album: Sardonic Wrath
Year: Year: Year: 2004
Genre(s): Metal: Death,Black
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Sardonic Wrath



N Track Title Track Length Preview Download Track
1 Order Of The Ominous 2:33 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
2 Information Wants To Be Syndicated 3:44 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
3 Sjakk Matt Jesu Krist 4:04 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
4 Straightening Sharks In Heaven 3:26 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
5 Alle Gegen Alle 3:21 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
6 Man Tenker Sitt 3:05 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
7 Sacrificing To The God Of Doubt 4:33 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
8 Hate Is The Law 3:22 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
9 Rawness Obsolete 6:14 PreviewDownload ringtone Download
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Dark metal group Darkthrone leaves no stone unturned when it comes to literally and figuratively attempting to scare the listener. From the seminal and bloodcurdling atmosphere saturating "Order of the Ominous," guitarist Nocturno Culto and drummer Fenriz take the album down a long, dark demonic alley. From there they bash you over the head with a hellish metal assault on "Information Wants to Be Syndicated," only slowing down for the brief guitar solo prior to the minute mark. Imagine Metallica or Slipknot on high-speed dubbing and you might come close to envisioning what Darkthrone is capable of. The primal growls accompanying the lyrics makes it appealing to metal fans, but the beefy guitar riffs are classic head-banging, devil-horned salute to metal ā la Black Sabbath. They rev their metal engine more on the quasi-rockabilly-meets-Motörhead "Sjakk Matt Jesu Krist," a simple and minimal track that is a highlight. The momentum continues on the crunchy "Straightening Sharks in Heaven" as the band shift into a mid-tempo gear led by Culto's buzzsaw guitars. At the heart of this record are meaty riffs and less sinister or satanic hues. This is exemplified on "Alle Gegen Alle" that winds around a Judas Priest-meets-shoegazer brand of rock before fleshing out with a no-holds-barred rave-up. Another stellar moment is the Iron Maiden-ish "Man Tenker Sitt" which builds on top of each verse to create a memorable track. Punishing without being overpowering, Darkthrone excels from start to finish, particularly on the rapid "Hate Is the Law" that goes into a fine Angus Young-like rock riff before veering headlong into hardcore dark metal. ~ Jason MacNeil, All Music Guide

Facing music industry's legal wrath, eDonkey to fold

In wake of Supreme Court ruling, peer-to-peer exec tells Congress his company's "throwing in the towel."

Leading peer-to-peer application eDonkey will soon comply with the demands of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and shut down, the top executive behind the service told a congressional committee Wednesday.

According to a transcript from testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sam Yagan, the CEO of eDonkey developer MetaMachine Inc., said that his company would be "throwing in the towel" after it received an RIAA cease-and-desist notice.

"I'd like to make it clear to the committee that we have replied to the RIAA's cease-and-desist letter," Yagan told the committee in a hearing called Protecting Copyright and Innovation in a Post-Grokster World.

The hearing was set up in the wake of the US Supreme Court's decision in MGM vs. Grokster, which found that Grokster could be sued for inducing copyright infringement for acts taken in the course of marketing file sharing software.

After the ruling, RIAA sent cease-and-desist letters to seven file-sharing services, including once-popular WinMX, which shut down last week.

The eDonkey site is currently live, and Yagan did not provide details on the company's termination of the service.

"The Grokster standard requires divining a company's intent, the decision was essentially a call to litigate," he said. "This is critical because most startup companies just don't have very much money... I simply couldn't afford the protracted litigation needed to prove my case in court under Grokster. Without that financial ability, exiting the business was our only option despite my confidence that we never induced infringement and that we would have prevailed under the Grokster standard."

But although Yagan said his company couldn't deal with the legal costs of an industry lawsuit, he did say that RIAA's tactics aren't helping the music business.

"I fear that the winners in Grokster will not be the labels and the studios, but rather the offshore, underground, rogue P2P developers who will have just lost half a dozen of their biggest competitors," Yagan warned.

An RIAA spokesperson could not be reached for comment.

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