iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store. If iTunes doesn’t open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop. Progress Indicator
iTunes 9

iTunes is the world’s easiest way to organize and add to your digital music and video collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Age of Winters by The Sword, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Age of Winters

The Sword

View More by this Artist

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from The Sword

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Celestial Crown The Sword 1:56 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Barael's Blade The Sword 2:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Freya The Sword 4:34 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Winter's Wolves The Sword 4:36 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 The Horned Goddess The Sword 5:01 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Iron Swan The Sword 5:46 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Lament for the Auroch The Sword 7:59 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 March of the Lor The Sword 4:41 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Ebethron The Sword 5:33 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Coming to grips with the Sword's unlikely genesis in the alternative music Mecca of Austin, TX, leads one to wonder whether heavy metal has finally become hip again. Depending on your generation, nothing will seem as simultaneously preposterous (Gen-X'ers who came of age during pop-metal's heyday and don't recognize it as an unrepresentative anomaly) or obvious (everyone else) when discussing a genre that's spent the bulk of its 35-year history on the absolute fringe of rock culture. If that isn't "alternative," well, what is? In any case, glorifying heavy metal's prototypical qualities is exactly what the Sword is all about, and their 2006 debut, Age of Winters, sees them joining California's High on Fire, Sweden's Witchcraft, and Australia's Wolfmother (to name but a few) at the forefront of what's gradually become known in the mid-'00s as the "heritage" or "retro-metal" movement. No, not stoner rock — that's sooo ten years earlier! The only thing the Sword and their ilk have in common with most '90s stoner rockers is recognizing that all heavy metal empires are sprung from the Black Sabbath cornerstone, and the token signs can be readily heard in these songs' ominous doom chords (just listen to opener "Celestial Crown" and "Lament for the Aurochs"), pummeling, down-picked staccato riff-runs ("Barael's Blade," "Ebethron"), lyrics about fantasy and legend ("Freya," "The Horned Goddess," etc.), and, finally, those borderline-inadequate, zombie vocals first made acceptable by Ozzy himself. The Sword's singer, JD Cronise, is certainly guilty of the latter, but then that only helps to focus one's attention upon the album's main attraction: its megalithic guitar work. For the record, the Sword spins the evolutionary clock as far forward as '80s thrash, on occasion, resulting in colossal, galloping onslaughts such as "Winter's Wolves" (complete with howling wolves, naturally) and "Iron Swan" (prefaced by delicate melodies of a medieval feel). Yes, you'll probably have to be a certified, stainless steel metalhead to really appreciate the skyscraping riff constructions of "March of the Lor" (an instrumental in eight movements!), but the vast majority of what's on-hand proves remarkably well-balanced and almost suspiciously immediate to the ears. As such, Age of Winters provides neophyte (errr — alternative?) listeners with as good an entryway as any into the "retro-metal" universe, while also managing to sound refreshing even to calloused heavy metal ears — this is no small achievement.

Recent Customer Reviews

Phenominal
     
by Playa Bobo

This band is so amazing. I can't believe how they can sound like a 70's-80's metal band an be from 2006! It's one of the few bands today that isn't a wuss band like coldplay or nickelback, or a screamo band such as a job for a cowboy, the black dahlia murder, or anything like that. It has loud guitar riffs and pounding drums that not many bands have today. I reccomend buying this album and Gods Of The Earth by the Sword.

Dark, Evil, Goodness!
     
by JaredM8

Simply put... These guys ROCK! The production isn't the greatest, but the face melting riffs and the powerful melodies more than make up for it. If you are an old school metal fan, or just a hard rock fan in general, you won't be disappointed with this purchase.

Plain and Simple- Heavy Riffs
     
by Tengent

I'll just keep this short. I love the album. My only complaint (perhaps with the entire metal genre..) is that there is no variety. Every song is in the same key. That's metal for you though. :P

Biography

Formed: 2003 in Austin, TX

Genre: Metal

Years Active: '00s

Not to be confused with the Canadian heavy metal band from the late '80s, named simply Sword, the Sword is a retro-metal four-piece hailing from — of all places — the singer/songwriter oasis of Austin, TX. First conceived in 2003, the Sword really hit their stride about a year later, when...
Full Bio
Age of Winters, The Sword
View In iTunes

Customer Ratings

     
164 Ratings

Contemporaries