18.02.21 | Alex Sievers
2005 was a big 12-month window for music! Fall Out Boy’s breakout ‘From Under The Cork Tree,’ The Mars Volta’s first step toward glorious self-indulgence with ‘Frances The Mute,’ the core of The Black Dahlia Murder’s evil sound on ‘Miasma,’ Bullet For My Valentine exploding due to ‘The Poison,’ Trivium making their claim on ‘Ascendency,’ Avenged Sevenfold blowing up more by way of ‘City Of Evil,’ and 30 Seconds To Mars getting big off the 40% of ‘A Beautiful Lie’ that people actually remember and like.
As for the great fifteen albums from 2005 that are covered here, they might not necessarily be the biggest from their respective creators, but they are some of these artists’ strongest offerings. Equally important, these are releases that I dearly enjoy and deeply respect. Albums that I personally revisited many times during 2020 when they all hit this milestone; albums that have withstood time, the harshest critic of the
Gojira Detail New Album Fortitude
Watch a video for the record s Born for One Thing
Fortitude, the band s latest arrives April 30 through Roadrunner.
Following 2016 s
Fortitude features 11 tracks, including 2020 arrival Another World. The album was recorded and produced by vocalist/guitarist Joe Duplantier and mixed by Andy Wallace.
New song Born for One Thing arrives alongside today s announcement, complete with a video from director Charles De Meyer you can find below. We have to practice detaching ourselves from everything, beginning with actual things, Duplantier offered of the song s anti-consumerist message in a statement. Own less possessions, and give what you don t need away, because one day we ll have to let everything go, and if we don t, we ll just become ghosts stuck between dimensions.
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CREDIT: Gabrielle Duplantier
French-born, New York City-dwelling metallers Gojira have shared the single “Born For One Thing” from their upcoming album,
Fortitude. The LP, the band’s seventh and first in five years, arrives April 30th via Roadrunner Records.
“We have to practice detaching ourselves from everything, beginning with actual things,” vocalist/guitarist Joe Duplantier said in a statement about the song’s anti-consumerist message. “Own less possessions, and give what you don’t need away, because one day we’ll have to let everything go, and if we don’t, we’ll just become ghosts stuck between dimensions.”