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Anthropocentric

The Ocean

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Album Review

As befits their namesake, the Ocean think big. This album is the second half of a two-disc set; the first half, Heliocentric, was released at the beginning of 2010, with this disc finishing out the year. These two discs succeed a two-CD set, Precambrian, released in 2007. Each of these (each Ocean record, really) is a sit-down-with-the-lyric-sheet-and-ponder experience; it's possible to just let the loud guitars and thundering drums wash over you, as you would with, say, High on Fire, but that's so clearly not what the band wants to happen that Anthropocentric ceases to be cathartic, like all the best metal, and starts to feel like homework. That's not to say that the band doesn't rock. "The Grand Inquisitor II: Roots & Locusts" has a headlong fury that's reminiscent of the Mars Volta at times, and the title track is a near-ten-minute stomp, like Isis crossed with the early-'90s hardcore band Judge. But they slow down and do the ballad thing too often, the better to communicate their ultra-important message, which boils down to a critique of Christianity just like six hundred thousand other metal bands, except these guys filter it through Dostoevsky 'cause they're smarter than you.

Customer Reviews

In Defense of Homework

Yes, this is a thinking album, get over it right now.

However it's absolutely amazing if you are willing to get past the fact that this could actually *gasp* TEACH YOU SOMETHING!

For some reason the review iTunes chose to have as the main review simplifies the album far too much. Yes, there are 600,000 other metal bands that have critiqued Christianity, but none of them have managed to do it so soundly as The Ocean have, these are all legitimate philosophical viewpoints on the issue, not just Chuck Schuldiner expressing distaste (See, "Crystal Mountain") whoever wrote that review needs to stop stating his opinion as fact, cathartic ≠ good, it is simply is a trend in metal.

Oh, and the music is really good too, almost forgot about that. It is much more aggressive than "Heliocentric" was, while still knowing when to slow down for effect. It does however, start to sound a bit like Opeth on certain songs, which certainly is not a bad thing. Expect a big orchestral sounding sound, driven mostly by guitar, with many really powerful riffs.

Overall, if you are looking for something you can just put on and headbang into oblivion too (sorry Cannibal Corpse fans!), this may not be for you, but, if you are looking for a really powerful and sophisticated sound, and if the idea that the lyrics are incredibly well thought out too sounds like a plus, this is exactly what you want. (Also, get Heliocentric, its lighter, but this is part 2 of a double-concept album, and really isn't complete without Helio.)

Very Cool!

"The Grand Inquisitor II: Roots and Locusts" may be the best metal song I've ever heard!

Amazing

Beatiful and brutal, primal and progressive, Soothing and angering. This has it all. Listening takes me on a great musical journey. Similar to Isis, Neurosis, Cult of Luna and the like, but take it a step up and just hits a homerun. In short it is just an amazing album.

Biography

Genre: Metal

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Originally known as the Ocean Collective, before shortening their name to simply the Ocean, this forward-thinking ensemble from Berlin, Germany, was founded in early 2000 by guitarist Robin Staps, who soon surrounded himself with fellow guitarist Andreas Hillebrand, bassist Jonathan Heine, drummer Torge Liessmann, percussionist Gerd Kornmann, and a variety of individually specialized vocalists, including Nico Webers, Sean Ingram, Nate Newton, Thomas Hallbom, and Carsten Albrecht. Inspired in part...
Full Bio
Anthropocentric, The Ocean
View In iTunes

Customer Ratings

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