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    Anthrax - We've Come For You All (2003) [Japanese 1st Press,VICP-61920]

    Posted By: apocalipsys2014
    Anthrax - We've Come For You All (2003) [Japanese 1st Press,VICP-61920]

    Anthrax - We've Come For You All (2003)
    Year & Label: 2003 Skism Records/Victor Japan | CD#: VICP-61920
    Flac (image) | MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | Artwork (JPG, 300 dpi) | File-hosts: HotFile & FileServe
    Thrash Metal | FLAC: 420 MB | MP3: 140 MB | Artwork: 55 MB | 5% WinRAR Recovery

    EAC Secure-rip with LOG+CUE+COVERS | Source: torrent
    Japanese 1st press CD with bonus track

    The cover art of Anthrax's We've Come for You All depicts the band gripping a circle of hands, as a beam of light shines on them from behind. It can be taken two ways. Vocalist John Bush, drummer Charlie Benante, bassist Frank Bello, rhythm guitarist Scott Ian, and new lead guitarist Rob Caggiano might be pulling their fans onto an imaginary stage, to join them in the limelight. But those fans might also be pulling them back from the depths of label-derived acrimony that has plagued Anthrax in the years since Stomp 442, the band's last proper LP release. Since then, metal in all its forms rose to the top of the charts, and hybrids of rap-rock and nu-metal – genres built on what Anthrax helped create – came to dominate heavy alternative. With new personnel, a new label (Sanctuary), and the survival of a PR firestorm in the wake of the anthrax scare, all the pieces were in place for a comeback. Instead, Anthrax seems to have designed the pile-driving thrash and carefree rock forays of We've Come for You All to say one thing: We never left. While Anthrax famously kick-started the rap-metal genre with its Public Enemy collaboration on "Bring the Noise," it largely sidesteps the sound on We've Come for You All, opting instead for a volatile mix of thrash and conventional metal, anchored by the gruff vocals of Bush. After a brief intro, "What Doesn't Die" drops, with Bush sounding positively furious as he screams "You cannot kill what doesn't die." As the band cranks out a vintage thrash rhythm, Caggiano introduces himself with the first of many blistering solos. And if you're a fan of the double bass drum pedals, Benante's double-time outro is like a clinic for metal drumming. E-Town Concrete's Anthony Martini's animalistic roar begins the seething "Refuse to be Denied," which continues the album's theme of resolve. While the record does nod to modern production techniques (courtesy of Caggiano's Scrap 60 collective) and expands melodically, the instrumentation and rage that have always been Anthrax's hallmarks are for the most part present and accounted for, undiluted by forays into marginalized, corporatized active rock that might have sold some records, but wouldn't have won over any real fans.

    Unfortunately, the band chose "Safe at Home" – one of the album's weakest tracks – as We've Come for You All's single. Bearing a striking resemblance to Metallica's "Sad But True," the song opts for a pleading chorus that is the record's only straightforward nod to the anthemic post-grunge that has taken over metal in recent years. This misstep aside, We've Come for You All is a typical thrash metal album, in an age where such a thing no longer exists. The introspective acoustic guitar duet of "Anyplace But Here" gives way to a muscular Scott Ian riff that gives way to an effective nod to East Coast hardcore during the chorus. Though a bombastic overture slows things down ("There's ways to kill a giant"? Come on…), the song recovers with another screed from Caggiano. Though Pantera guitarist Dimebag Darrell stops by for the strutting '70s rock groove of "Cadillac Rock Box," the album features a more unlikely guest star on "Taking the Music Back." As Bush gives the lyrical finger to the record industry, Roger Daltrey appears to duet with him on the chorus and add a few trademark growls of his own. After another brief interlude, We've Come for You All makes its final descent with "Think About an End" and the closing title track. Once again, Bush's vocals present the band as a survivor, a unit that has always been supported by itself and its fans. At the same time, "Think" seems to lash out at Christianity. But it's strange. The song name-checks Rage Against the Machine in its chorus, uses the phrase "killing in the name" in its lyrics, and even bears a resemblance to the hard-hitting grooves of Rage's early material. It's unclear whether this reflects a positive or negative relationship between the two groups. Nevertheless, the song's meaty, churning groove slides right into the final title track. "W.C.F.Y.A."'s lyrics revel in heavy metal cliché ("The wrecking ball is here/Your chest contains no treasure"; "Patience starts to bleed/Increasing enmity/It's time to let the bullets fly"). But what is this band but a heavy metal survivor? If anyone can rely on the genre's boilerplate, it's Anthrax. A particularly nice touch is the fadeout on the song's final, titular words, as if they're still coming, for you, out there somewhere in the night. The band is sure to win back, win over, and alienate individual parts of its audience with We've Come for You All. But it's effectively reestablished itself not by embracing the recent homogenization of heavy music, but by grafting its more marketable elements onto its tried and true thrash.

    ~ allmusic.com
    Anthrax Official Homepage
    Anthrax Wikipedia
    Anthrax at MySpace.com

    Musicians:

    Rhytm Guitar : Scott Ian
    Drums : Charlie Benante
    Bass : Frank Bello
    Vocals : John Bush
    Lead Guitar : Rob Caggiano

    Produced by Anthrax and Scrap 60
    Mixed by Scrap 60 and Charlie Benante
    Scrap 60 are: Eddie Wohl, Rob Caggiano and Steve Regina.

    Track List:

    01. Contact [1:16]
    02. What Doesn't Die [4:09]
    03. Superhero [4:03]
    04. Refuse To Be Denied [3:20]
    05. Safe Home [5:11]
    06. Any Place But Here [5:49]
    07. Nobody Knows Anything [2:57]
    08. Strap It On [3:31]
    09. Black Dahlia [2:39]
    10. Cadillac Rock Box [3:41]
    11. Taking The Music Back [3:10]
    12. Crash [0:59]
    13. Think About An End [5:09]
    14. W.C.F.Y.A. [7:19]
    15. We're A Happy Family (Bonus Track) [2:01]

    Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 4 from 23. January 2008

    EAC extraction logfile from 27. December 2010, 1:40

    Anthrax / We've Come For You All (VICP-61920)

    Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A Adapter: 0 ID: 0

    Read mode : Secure
    Utilize accurate stream : Yes
    Defeat audio cache : Yes
    Make use of C2 pointers : No

    Read offset correction : 30
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Installed external ASPI interface

    Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
    Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo


    TOC of the extracted CD

    Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
    1 | 0:00.00 | 1:15.43 | 0 | 5667
    2 | 1:15.43 | 4:09.07 | 5668 | 24349
    3 | 5:24.50 | 4:03.23 | 24350 | 42597
    4 | 9:27.73 | 3:20.02 | 42598 | 57599
    5 | 12:48.00 | 5:10.40 | 57600 | 80889
    6 | 17:58.40 | 5:49.30 | 80890 | 107094
    7 | 23:47.70 | 2:57.20 | 107095 | 120389
    8 | 26:45.15 | 3:31.23 | 120390 | 136237
    9 | 30:16.38 | 2:38.72 | 136238 | 148159
    10 | 32:55.35 | 3:40.55 | 148160 | 164714
    11 | 36:36.15 | 3:10.20 | 164715 | 178984
    12 | 39:46.35 | 0:58.58 | 178985 | 183392
    13 | 40:45.18 | 5:09.10 | 183393 | 206577
    14 | 45:54.28 | 7:19.00 | 206578 | 239502
    15 | 53:13.28 | 2:00.52 | 239503 | 248554


    Range status and errors

    Selected range

    Filename D:\metallihead\Anthrax\Anthrax - We've Come For You All (VICP-61920).wav

    Peak level 100.0 %
    Range quality 100.0 %
    Test CRC 0D265702
    Copy CRC 0D265702
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred


    AccurateRip summary

    Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [F1C4276A]
    Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [0E29DF4E]
    Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [2DE19F79]
    Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [B4A1F12F]
    Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [9213149E]
    Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [73496DD8]
    Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [BA2C300A]
    Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [9EC71BAC]
    Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [99A90D9D]
    Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [5D81DE3E]
    Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [DF387B15]
    Track 12 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [1F5601B0]
    Track 13 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [84DB2655]
    Track 14 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [5B6656ED]
    Track 15 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [98604028]

    All tracks accurately ripped

    End of status report


    Flac, image + artwork at HotFile.com
    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4

    Mp3 320 kbps
    Artwork

    ––––-

    Flac, image + artwork at FileServe.com
    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4

    Mp3 320 kbps
    Artwork

    All links are interchangeable…
    Not my rip, not my scan-job. Thx very much to the original uploader bki71 !
    5% WinRar Recovery Record for all files.
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