CD Zone: The latest Music, Ablums, Singles, Box Sets, Vinyls and Casettes

Pop MusicRock MusicIndie MusicDance MusicR&B MusicHip Hop and Rap MusicHard Rock and Metal MusicSoundtracks

 

 

 

 

 

Duffy Rockerferry CD

Categories
Music
Kate Nash Music
Gwen Stefani Music
Mika Music
Related Categories
• General AAS
• Bestsellers
• Heavy Metal
• CD Album
Amy MacDonald Music

Nostradamus

Nostradamus


Other Views:
Artist: Judas Priest
Label: SonyBMG
Category: Music

List Price: £17.99
Buy New: £9.98
You Save: £8.01 (45%)



New (35) Used (4) from £5.43

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 1538

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 886973155929
EAN: 0886973155929
ASIN: B0018C1DQ4

Release Date: June 16, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Dawn of Creation - PROPHECY
  • Awaking - REVELATIONS
  • The Four Horseman - WAR
  • Sands Of Time - PESTILENCE AND PLAGUE/ DEATH
  • Peace - CONQUEST/ LOST LOVE / PERSECUTION
  • Solitude - EXILED/ALONG
  • Shadows IN The Flame - VISIONS
  • Hope - NEW BEGINNING
  • Calm Before The Storm - NOSTRADAMUS/ FUTURE OF MANKIND

Similar Items:

  • Death Magnetic Limited Edition
  • Good To Be Bad (Limited Edition Box) (2CD)
  • Wake The Sleeper
  • Motorizer
  • Black Ice

Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Where's the ...ER track?   October 27, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

First rule of any JP album, there must be a track with a title ending in ...ER, think Grinder, Sinner, the ripper, Jawbreaker, Cheater and pushing the point a little, Rocka Rolla. Shock! Horror! there's no such track to be found on Nostradamus
So having established that the rule book's taken a hike for this one, what have we got? Well if you were expecting another bunch of NWOBHM tracks from a group of blokes who have got back together merely to top up the pension fund, well forget it. This is a complete departure from the well trodden path, yes its a concept album but a concept album without the long dreary pretentious bits of many of the 70's worst examples of the genre. Instead its soars and dives from thrashing guitar to gentle melody and back like a Wagner opera.

Die hard fans looking for another "British Steel" will be sorely disapointed, imagine Marilion lyrics played by Iron Maiden with instrumental sections by Ian Anderson (no flutes though) and your about there. That being said, if you're the kind of person who can enjoy Motorhead whilst still appreciating Mozart, its well worth buying even if it should have had one more track - Prophesier!!



2 out of 5 stars This album is like Marmite you either love it or hate it   October 26, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I fall into the latter category. Some have really enjoyed Priest going off on this tangent but it didn't do anything for me. There is nothing wrong with it really from the standpoint of musical quality, Halford's voice was tailor made for (Rock) Opera and such a project but I'm not so sure about the rest of the band. There just wasn't that sharp bite you get with the legendary Priest albums of the past, it is like they were always in first gear. I listened to both CDs waiting patiently for them to up the tempo but it never came and I was left with a feeling of emptiness I'm sorry to say.

I would have rather have had 12 individual Metal tracks with a few ballads mixed in for good measure, that formula has always worked for them in the past. Lets hope they return to what they do better than no other Metal band on earth for their next album. I applaud them for trying something different it just (for me anyway) didn't work.



3 out of 5 stars found it pretty good - 3.5/5   October 22, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Actually I`ve never really been much of a Priest fan and I remember them from way back in 1980 so I`ve been around a while and I wasn`t going to care how much this album sounded like Priest are supposed to sound.

I think that they should have edited it down to one strong, long single album but overall I quiet liked it. I am a fan of vangelis and classical style filmscores so I enjoyed that aspect of it. A couple of fast numbers would have been good somewhere as well.

So this album uses the filmscore/rock Opera approach to metal which is great if done well and this has been done pretty well just a bit too long. Not as good as Manowar`s `Gods of War` concept album of last year or as good as any Opeth song ( all their songs tend to sound like a concept album ! ) but overall a good effort that obviously had an awful lot of work put into it. 3.5 out of 5.



4 out of 5 stars Who'd have predicted this one?   October 3, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

The omens were not good for this. The only evidence available for Priests grandiose intentions was the song Loch Ness on the Angel For Retribution album and this, without question, is the most horribly embarrassing misstep that I've ever witnessed from any group, any time, period (OK , there was Spinal Tap but they shouldn't count). So the prospect of a double album of lumbering grunge with Rob wailing along sincerely to songs about sorcerers, goblins etc with complete conviction was too ghastly to comprehend.

So who could have predicted this? - well, Nostradamus apparently. This is a total revelation. Symphonic, heavy, complex with shades of light and dark - it is, dare I say, quite clever. It is arguably over long, with the first CD dragging a touch and there are moments of West End Musical and Neil Diamond creeping in in the vocals, but the whole carries the parts.

It's not the best Priest album but it is most definitely not the car crash that I expected after enduring the Loch Ness travesty that preceded it.



2 out of 5 stars I Am Willy Wonka!   August 22, 2008
 5 out of 9 found this review helpful

I make no qualms or secret about the fact I'm a massive Judas Priest fan, I love the boys dearly (not in the same way Dave Holland does either) and they've provided me with hours upon hours of fun much like some enormous heavy metal jigsaw. But with 'Nostradamus' all the excitement and hope of a new Priest album was quashed, once the floodgates had been opened 'Nostradamus' just sort of waffled its way out. All the heraldry, trumpet fanfares and strippers exploding out of cakes that so often comes with mainstream metal releases only added to the disappointment and as such 'Nostradamus' has sat collecting dust and the exoskeletons of all sorts of creepy crawlies (it seems renting a flat with Miss Havisham wasn't the most hygienic of my decisions). And upon revision it seems 'Nostradamus' hasn't gained anything, absence may make the heart grow fonder, but in this case it made me reckon that Priest's latest simply isn't a good one.

Honestly, I feel a tad guilty taking pot shots at this, I mean it's Priest - two guitarists with a strange similarity to those gin-drinking single mothers, a singer who is developing a back problem from his auto-cue and um... a rhythm section. I feel for the guys, the lovable eccentric (strangely spouseless in Rob's case) uncles of heavy metal. But something is very much astray here and I can't ignore it any more.

On his summer holiday someone must have given Halford a copy of Blind Guardian's 'Nightfall...' or maybe Virgin Steele's 'Atreus...' series. Obviously, he didn't listen to the bloody things and simply went;
"Yes, we are Judas Priest, we can pull off ambitious concept albums... quick Glen, to the Pro Tools!". And there we have it, Priest gave us 'Nostradamus'. This whole thing reeks of Pro Tooled castration, everything is ruthlessly neat and largely sterile. Honestly, I don't give a eff how much you dig all this modern equipment, you should still be striving to capture an organic feel to your record if you play in a traditional metal band. A main aim of 'Nostradamus' was to prove that Priest could still cut it with the young guns, they'd already done this with 'Painkiller' see, and it worked. The album actually succeeds in this aim, as this isn't the Priest of old or even the safe comeback of 'Angel of Retribution'. Instead this rather a saggy, bloated album is Priest for the 21st century: overblown and overlong much in keeping with most of the young fellows out there. The Pro Tooled vibe is best seen in the albums drumming. Scott Travis is an excellent drummer, that I can't doubt. But here he is bound and chained to functioning as a metronome simply to keep Glen and Ken's adventures in banality in time. But guess what? The boys haven't even worked out Pro Tools properly... they managed to delete most of the guitars from the verses in 'War', or at least I hope they did, I mean Judas Priest wouldn't have submitted that as a complete song, would they?

Oh lord, there are a whole bucket load of iffy moments to be had with 'Nostradamus'. 'Pestilence and Plague' for instance, nice enough verses here but then an Italian chorus? Ew, if I was of Italian descend I would have much preferred a big sing along of;
"GREASY WOPS, GREASY WOPS, PIZZA PIE!". Xenophobic as that may have been, it's much less awkward than the novelty of an Italian chorus. 'Death' is a complete snorefest, this was one of the tracks I was exposed to prior to this albums release, at the otherwise fantastic Download festival performance. It's heavy and sinister I'll give them that, but completely lacking in that necessary black magic (not the chocolates) to make a sinister metal classic. But honestly, most of the whole first side of this is pretty much interchangeable in its blandness and overwhelmingly modern in its approach to rubbish. There are a few glimmers of hope every now and again but this is a Judas Priest album, even 'Ram It Down' had more killers than this!

But there are two excellent numbers on the first half of this incredibly overwrought album, 'Prophecy' and 'Persecution'. The former is a tacky, schlock-tastic song with a storming mid-paced riff that will fill up those arenas quite nicely. Halford's vocals are still in excellent form, albeit a tad raspy and are generally well accented by the cheesy B-movie keyboards that aren't too far from Geoff Nicholls' work with Sabbath. And of course, the chorus had us in all in a bought of laughter all over the world... brilliant stuff. The guitar break is nice too, recalling 'Defenders...' era stuff like 'Love Bites'. But it's a lulling you into a false sense of security, I suppose I shouldn't hear the first song of a record and go "Agggrh best album ever *insert band name here* are back!". 'Prophecy' begins with an atmospheric if slightly processed guitar motif and then settles into some comfortable speed metal, good stuff but hardly awe-inspiring, but by the low standards this album has given itself, quite enjoyable, especially in such a nadir of none-starters.

The second disc generally continues the album's true concept - the none-starter. But somehow it feels a little a better, maybe it's because you can see the light at the end of this dry concept album. After two go-nowhere-nothing-special Priest tracks, we get 'Alone'. This one is a nice anthemic balladic song, it does seem like it's trying a little too hard, but then again so does the whole album. Just before the five minute mark we get a nice little UFO reference, hear that? Pinched from the truly beautiful 'Love to Love' from UFO's 'Lights Out' album... yeah KK, I spotted it. Ears like a hawk! Earlier in the song we get a nice bit of 80s arena metal Priest riffage which is pretty satisfying. 'Visions' is a standout here, something a little different for the band. This wouldn't sound out of place on any modern power metal album, for instance it's not far removed, stylistically at least, from some of the Deris era Helloween ballads. Still compare this to the truly moving 'Night Comes Down' or the psychedelic haze of 'Dreamer/Deceiver' and it falls far short of the immense emotional depth Priest have been capable with their ballads in the past. The title track is another good 'un, a complete retread of 'Painkiller' but enjoyable. The synths are well used here and Halford's quasi-operatic vocals are a nice touch (but don't you think it should go into the Gloria Gaynor song after the 'But I will survive!' line?). It's very cheesy, even by the Priest's own standards, but somehow it works... maybe that's because we all loved 'Painkiller'. However, the timing of this being the first single has only gone to further undermine 'Nostradamus' as it's the only song of this sort on the album. Nowhere else do Priest achieve this velocity or bombast on this album... so it simply crushed the expectations of many fans.

Glen and KK do rip it up here with the leads, no surprise really. But then again guitarists often dig stuff like this to shred over. Give a guitarist a nice simple chord progression or riff to work over and they can really let rip (I'm not implying that they can't do this over more complex arrangements, mind you) . So in all actuality, this album is Glen and KK getting with the Joe Bonamassa crowd- boring songs and killer solos! Guitar World loves you!

The segues here are generally dull too, the only advantage they have over the rest of the album is that they're much shorter! So that's a positive I guess... I'm going to put this album up on the fridge, well done guys. A lot of the time the band are trying to capture that beautiful epic feeling of 'Children of the Sea', but the magic is gone, the dragon slain and the it's a complete case of déjà vu - it's been done before and it was much better. Conceptually this album doesn't achieve much either. The lyrics are generally poorly done. I've been told that this is what happens when Glen Tipton gets a big hand in writing lyrics, it happened with the Ripper era too. The rhyme schemes are painfully obvious... love/dove/above stuff, GCSE English fodder. Historical and literary lyrics have always been Iron Maiden's forte, so it is completely beyond me why the authors of 'Living After Midnight' decided to go down this route. Perhaps, it's a case of keeping up with the Harris'... but Priest need to come to terms with the fact they are Judas Priest, not a European power metal band and not Iron Maiden. However, this isn't the first time the two's careers have intertwined - from the synth experimentation, the dodgy replacement singers, the solo careers which both involved Roy Z and now the controversial reunion albums. In all these periods it seems Iron Maiden have come out on top, as their latest actually maintained my interest for more than one listen! Astounding!

'Nostradamus' is a functionless album- if I want a Priest album I'll listen to, wait for it, a good one and for the ambitious conceptual stuff I'll also want, shock horror, a good one! The idea of the double CD album has proven itself a bad one, again and again, see Helloween's third installment of the Keeper series for another example (though that is perfect in comparison to this the ugliest of Judas' ducklings). Artists seem to be taking the same amount of good ideas they would have used for a single CD and are dragging them out, with all means of padding and fluff, into ungodly lengths of time (I figure this thing takes more time to listen to than it actually did to write, you know copy and paste on the old computer recording tool). Hopefully, this idea of the double CD album will prove itself a teething problem of the 2000s and be what goldfish in platforms were to the 70s, Flock of Seagulls hair was for the 80s and what Courtney Love was to the 90s. Also the packaging sucks, especially for the 10 I shelled out for this and more importantly, I want the old Priest logo back!




 

All products listed on the CD Zone website are processed by Amazon.co.uk so you can enjoy a secure payment transaction. When you've finished shopping, click the 'checkout' button and you'll be redirected to Amazon.co.uk to complete the transaction. Please click here to contact Amazon.

Cheap Music from CD Zone

 

Entertainment Shop | Games And Consoles | Gadgets And Toys | Bargain Book Store | Man Utd Shop | Beatles Shop | Oasis Shop | CD Shop | Ricky Gervais Shop
Save Index | Discount Codes and Vouchers | Cashback World | Mobile Phone Price Checker | Latest Mobile Offers | Best Broadband Providers | Price Comparison