| Sputnikmusic
 

Coheed and Cambria – “Key Entity Extraction I: Domino The Destitute”

When I fell in love with Coheed and Cambria, it was a swoon over their heavier side: Claudio Sanchez’s bitter lyrics in “Welcome Home”, the epic waves of electric riffs, and the complex solo spanning the latter portion of the song.  That isn’t to say I don’t enjoy me some lighthearted bops, because Coheed has a wide selection of those as well, but sometimes first impressions mean everything.  Coheed, to me, was f’n badass.

That’s why No World for Tomorrow and Year of the Black Rainbow registered as minor disappointments – and I stress minor because they’re both still solid outings.  But strong singles like the former’s title track and the latter’s “Here We Are Juggernaut” aside, they lacked that oomph, that extra push of raw grittiness that made me a fan from the time I first laid ears on “Welcome Home.”  That’s where 2012’s The Afterman: Ascension comes in, and the for-all-intents-and-purposes lead track “Domino The Destitute.”  Just as my interest in the band was beginning to wane, they burst out of a melodic haze of mediocrity with this 8-minute, guitar-thrashing epic showdown, where everything that I first loved about the band snapped back into focus.

“Domino” is an absolute beast of a song; it rides in on elongated riffs and pummeling drums, and Sanchez’s vocals are packed with emotion right from the start.  The chorus is one of their most infectious ever, and it feels like a rallying cry: “I implore you, brother / Don’t walk away, don’t walk away from me / ‘Cause this is our war.”  The song builds in both intensity and aggression as it progresses, culminating in this sweeping, magnificent guitar/drum breakdown, followed by chants of “One by one / We are together! We fall together!”  I still get chills every time I listen to this track from start to finish; it’s a thing of grit and emotion that hardly sacrifices any of the band’s melodic appeal.  Coheed has put out a handful of exceptional tracks this decade; this is quite possibly their best.

Read more from this decade at my homepage for Sowing’s Songs of the Decade.

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5JjmQsvmmmOBFnUjP7FLu4





Sowing
05.24.19
I also liked Here We Are Juggernaut, Atlas, and Old Flames for this spot

Gyromania
05.24.19
yuck

Sowing
05.24.19
to the song or the whole band
both answers are wrong just curious ;-)

Odal
05.24.19
Great write-up As a massive Coheed fan, I'm not even sure this song cracks my top ten for the decade, but that kind of furthers the point that their output is insanely impressive....minus the still-pretty-good Color Before the Sun.

Odal
05.24.19
top ten of theris for the decade*

Gyromania
05.24.19
to like 90% of the band's output, aside their first 3-4 albums

Odal
05.24.19
theirs* lol

Sowing
05.24.19
Yeah I'm a casual fan so I don't have an in-depth appreciation for every single album, although I have heard them all at least once or twice. The songs I listed in my first comment stuck out to me the most this decade, this one the most of all. I love powerful Coheed over poppy Coheed although both styles have moments that shine in their discography.

JohnnyoftheWell
05.24.19
Y E S
did not see this coming but this song is a colossal banger and underrated by Coheed fans imo (see above ;]). Caught them live when they were touring this and it was a phenomenal gig in one of the cooler venues I've seen, happy days...

Project
05.24.19
ah yes, my reminder to one day actually listen to this band's discog

that said from this decade, I'm more of a The Pavilion or Queen of the Dark man myself

Sowing
05.25.19
Damn PF definitely check their discography
I made the mistake of waiting so long to listen to their earlier albums, years of wasted prog-rock enjoyment

You need to be logged in to post a comment
Login | Register

STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy