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Avenged Sevenfold
Sounding the Seventh Trumpet


3.2
good

Review

by Necrotica USER (196 Reviews)
February 8th, 2014 | 28 replies


Release Date: 2001 | Tracklist


Chapter I: A Raw and Inconsistent Introduction

It's pretty easy to be tempted to immediately hold a bias toward Sounding the Seventh Trumpet because of the band that created it. However, the most important thing to remember is that this was before Avenged Sevenfold's huge breakthrough and all of the polarized opinions floating about their work today. Time has been the ultimate judge of this group, revealing their numerous ups, downs, experiments, perceived "sellout" moments, the works. It has arguably not been very kind to them in hindsight, the group creating complete failures such as the self-titled white album and Hail to the King; what I'm saying is that their early work is usually considered collectively to be their creative highlight. Basically, the albums that many would consider the "pre-sellout" days.

While Sounding the Seventh Trumpet is by no means a bad album (and certainly doesn't fall into many of the pits of the band's latest work), it definitely has its own share of problems. By this point, the band hadn't found their signature sound yet; while the successor Waking the Fallen was half-metalcore and half-traditional metal, this record is full-on metalcore. Hell, they even added some punk elements with songs like "Streets" and "Thick and Thin." More importantly, however, this is also the band's rawest and heaviest recording; while the piano ballad "Warmness on the Soul" breaks up the distortion a bit, the rest of the record is pretty much full-throttle in its intensity. This could be good or bad, depending on your tolerance for motif repetition and frequently hearing very similar key changes. Unfortunately, it's a little too half-baked for me; lead guitarist Synyster Gates wasn't in the band yet, so a decent chunk of the album consists of Drop-D riffs that don't really go anywhere... and that's generally because they're practically begging for some melodic leads to adorn them. Zacky Vengeance gives a solid performance here, but his riffs don't really stand out very much compared to what other metalcore bands were doing at the time. On a positive note, however, the album definitely leans more on the "metal" side of metalcore, and the riffs occasionally reflect influences like the classic eras of Iron Maiden and Pantera.

However, a few things especially stand out about this album compared to the band's other works. Along with how raw and distorted it is, Sounding The Seventh Trumpet is all about energy and investment. While M. Shadows' performance isn't exactly great here, he still seems to have a lot of conviction in his vocal work, particularly in how commanding his screams are. The Rev is similarly energetic and committed as he performs quick fills and delivers plenty of fast hard-hitting beats to accompany the meaty riffs. The album is just so damn fun to listen to at times despite its inconsistencies, and of course there are plenty of things that hint at the band's future as well. The introductory tune "To End the Rapture" is the only song with Synyster Gates' guitar work present, and he takes advantage of this opportunity to lay down a great neo-classical solo resembling his work on City of Evil and Waking the Fallen. Closer "Shattered by Broken Dreams" marks the group's first epic, and its acoustic balladry would be further fleshed out in Nightmare years down the line; meanwhile, "Lips of Deceit" uses a distorted series of guitar harmonies to kick things off, hinting at the harmonies of future albums while keeping its own unique sound intact. However, early experiments such as "Warmness on the Soul" and "Streets" prove that the band were already working to be different than their contemporaries.

It's hard to fault Avenged Sevenfold on trying to make a unique and even fun debut, but its inconsistencies and lack of really memorable riffs makes it a pretty frustrating listen at times. I recommend this to anyone who's curious about the band's beginnings as well as anyone who just wants something fast and heavy to headbang to, but the depth is a bit lacking. Nonetheless, it's fun and heavy, and to some people that'll be enough. It's a good record by a band who had plenty of growing to do.



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user ratings (2018)
3
good
other reviews of this album
Spec (4)
A metalcore debut full of imperfections, instrumental chaos and painful screamed vocals that come to...

TurnTheOtherWay (4)
...

DarthMann (3.5)
Sounding the Seventh Trumpet is an original, experimental piece of work that successfully achieves w...

Drunken Viking (3.5)
...



Comments:Add a Comment 
Necrotica
February 8th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 3.2

Damn, I have quite the headache right now :/

avonbarksdale221
February 8th 2014


8298 Comments


good review as usual. never heard this.

GhettoHmbrglr
February 8th 2014


1022 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

this band could have been decent if they followed the direction they were going when they made this album. too bad.

VermTheImpaler
February 8th 2014


1359 Comments


Neh, prefer waking, city and even nightmare

GhettoHmbrglr
February 8th 2014


1022 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

ya same with most people i know. don't matter though i gave up on these guys once i got out of high school.

VermTheImpaler
February 8th 2014


1359 Comments


Hail to the king was perhaps the most boring album of 2013, you know that an album is bad as fuck when the best track is an enter sandman ripoff

Necrotica
February 8th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 3.2

I, like many people, enjoy their first three albums the most. The self-titled is godawful, Nightmare is decent, and Hail to the King is really mediocre

VermTheImpaler
February 8th 2014


1359 Comments


Slef titled has some good stuff but stupid poop like a little piece of heaven is a joke

Necrotica
February 8th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 3.2

Yeah, Little Piece of Heaven sucks ass. The fanboys/fangirls who think it's "weird" or "the craziest thing I've heard" obviously haven't listened to Mr. Bungle or Oingo Boingo

EvoHavok
February 8th 2014


8078 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

I think that one is among my favs on the self-titled, it just makes me laugh. At least it's more special than some bland stuff on the album.

VermTheImpaler
February 8th 2014


1359 Comments


Little piece of heaven is not crazy, is just stupid as hell, is like a shitty parody of the corrpse bride

Insurrection
February 8th 2014


24844 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

turn the other way and darkness surrounding are hard jams

Atari
Staff Reviewer
February 8th 2014


27949 Comments


I love warmness on the soul

KriegdemKriege
February 8th 2014


1544 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

I think you spend way too much time apologizing for the band's later work in the review. You don't need to compare this to anything, it's a debut.



The review was well written though. I like Warmness on the Soul and Streets.

climactic
February 8th 2014


22742 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

streets rules, drums are awesome

Trebor.
Emeritus
February 8th 2014


59835 Comments


I thought the average for this was like 3.4

KILL
February 8th 2014


81580 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

terrible album

KriegdemKriege
February 8th 2014


1544 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

Shockingly terrible album.

Necrotica
February 8th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 3.2

m/

Necrotica
February 9th 2014


10693 Comments

Album Rating: 3.2

lol



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