Album Rating: 3.0
This album isn't very important
|
| |
Others would disagree, including myself.
http://noisey.vice.com/blog/armor-for-sleep-2005-week-what-to-do-when-you-are-dead
|
| |
Album Rating: 3.0
when major publications talk about emo/pop punk/post-hardcore nostalgia it makes me cringe I tell you
|
| |
Yeah, I don't find that to be very important, haha
|
| |
Album Rating: 5.0
album might not be important to you, but it really does deserve more recognition
|
| |
Album Rating: 4.5
It is remembered well I would say.
|
| |
Album still rules
|
| |
updated my rating =p
|
| |
Album Rating: 4.5
Damn. I can see why YOU would 5 this lmao
|
| |
got me q=
|
| |
Yeah this is pretty 5 worthy. I used to listen to it sooooo much
|
| |
Album Rating: 3.5
Still a great album, yes. I was one of the lucky ones to get the vinyl, haha.
|
| |
Love the album but not sure how to rate it. I'm somewhat convinced my nostalgia with the album is making it sound better than it is.
I do recall liking Dream to Make Believe more when this was first released...
|
| |
Listening to this now and it still rules damn
|
| |
Album Rating: 4.5
always love this, production fits it unlike other machine records, and it's not super cringey when you take it all together, at least for me. lotttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttta memories about listening to it. lent it out a lot too but still have my cd copy with the little guidebook unhurt too
|
| |
Interesting point, as I have a feeling if this was released in present day, it'd be pretty cringey.
|
| |
the fact that art is a creation of its era can be a part of the inherent appeal, if one values the concept of time in such a way =^p
|
| |
Album Rating: 4.5
imagine that there was a group of people playing acoustic pop punk in the 1800s. it's physically possible even if unlikely. it could have very well happened! and it's an obvious unverifiable fact that there were 100 5/5 acoustic guitar/vocal songs written and performed before my great grandfather made recording music possible.
|
| |
Album Rating: 5.0
right on
|
| |
now I'm thinking of all the possible genres of music that were created and lost with the people who created and listened to those genres. Like late 2000s post hardcore is what really got me into music that wasn't force fed to me and I feel bad for people who haven't listened to some of these albums that could potentially be their favorite albums for the rest of their lives.
but think about all of the unrecorded/transcribed music that was created back when people had it really shitty. How much passionate music that could have had a huge impact on me, just written and shared with a handful of people, then died with those people.
at least today, albums like this can be put into the world and since EVERYONE'S connected and music is so easily recorded, some one somewhere will appreciate your art. How many wasted masterpieces are there
|
| |
|