A Thousand Suns - Linkin Park Full Album Download or single song Download From Osthir.com - 1. Jornada Del Muerto 3. Wisdom, Justice, And Love 4. Empty Spaces 5. Waiting For The End 6. When They Come For Me 9. The Messenger 10. Iridescent 11. The Messenger 12. The Radiance. This site uses cookies for analytics, personalized content and ads. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to this use. A Thousand Suns is a concept album dealing with human fears such as nuclear warfare. The band has said the album is a drastic departure from their previous work; they experimented on different and new sounds. Continuing their successful partnership, Mike Shinoda and Rick Rubin, produced the band’s multi-concept album, A Thousand Suns. Delving into themes of pride, destruction and regret, the album topped various Billboard charts.
Continuing their slow crawl toward middle age, Linkin Park opt for moody over metallic on A Thousand Suns, their fifth album. A clear continuation of 2007’s Minutes to Midnight, A Thousand Suns also trades aggression for contemplation, burying the guitars under washes of chilly synthesizers -- a sound suited for a rap-metal band that no longer plays metal but hasn’t shaken off the angst, choosing to channel inward instead of outward. So few rap-metal bands have chosen to embrace their age -- they fight against it, deepening their technical chops while recycling ideas -- that it’s easy to admire Linkin Park’s decision not to shy away from it, even if their mega-success gives them the luxury to pursue musical risks. The problem is, the subdued rhythms, riffs, and raps of A Thousand Suns wind up monochromatic, an impression not erased by the brief bridges between songs, sampled speeches, and easy segues, every element retaining moodiness without offering distinction. Brooding is a better vehicle for angst than rage for a group whose members are well into their thirties, but an album created on a grayscale is less than compelling for anybody lacking the patience to squint and discern the minute details.
Sample | Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 02:01 | |||
2 | 00:57 | |||
3 | 04:13 | |||
4 | 00:18 | |||
5 | 04:55 | |||
6 | 04:28 | |||
7 | 01:34 | |||
8 | 03:51 | |||
9 | 04:39 | |||
10 | 04:15 | |||
11 | 01:38 | |||
12 | 04:56 | |||
13 | 01:23 | |||
14 | 05:39 | |||
15 | 03:01 |
A Thousand Splendid Suns Download Epub
blue highlight denotes track pickA Thousand Suns Download Album
This album is a masterpiece. There is no other way to put it. It's a perfect summary of modern life, rolled into one impressive album. If you watched the video for 'What I've Done' off their album 'Minutes to Midnight' and were impressed, be prepared to have your mind blown.
Every word spoken on this disk has meaning. It all starts with an incredible instrumental opening into the words spoken by the father of the atomic bomb himself. You're going to hear foreshadowing in 'When They Come For Me', the melancholy of daily life in 'Robot Boy' and 'Waiting for the End', and then a brilliant climax in 'Blackout.' Almost a Christ-like story - a man slowly thrust into greatness by the virtue of what he does on a daily basis, and a sudden, sharp darkness in what was to the date of this album the heaviest track they had ever laid down.
It's at 'Wretches and Kings' that the album transcends. A labour union speech from Mario Savio wakes us up after the heaviness, as the world awakens (perhaps post-crucifixion) into the industrial revolution and the struggles reminiscient of the loss of innocence in Blackout.
While the whole album has to be listened to cover-to-cover, if you just can't, then at least sit down for tracks 10-15. They have to be heard together, from Martin Luther King Jr.'s powerful voice losing all humanity, to perhaps the greatest song Linkin Park has ever released (Iridescent), to the de-dehumanization that takes place in 'Fallout' and into 'The Catalyst' and 'The Messenger.' Like a risen Christ-figure or the rebirth of humanity after the depths of its darkest descent, we wake up to the greatest beauty and hope that humanity can create.
This album is incredible. It needs to be heard cover to cover, all 47:48 of it. Sit down and enjoy it and tell your story through it. There's power here that needs to be heard to be truly enjoyed.
Every word spoken on this disk has meaning. It all starts with an incredible instrumental opening into the words spoken by the father of the atomic bomb himself. You're going to hear foreshadowing in 'When They Come For Me', the melancholy of daily life in 'Robot Boy' and 'Waiting for the End', and then a brilliant climax in 'Blackout.' Almost a Christ-like story - a man slowly thrust into greatness by the virtue of what he does on a daily basis, and a sudden, sharp darkness in what was to the date of this album the heaviest track they had ever laid down.
It's at 'Wretches and Kings' that the album transcends. A labour union speech from Mario Savio wakes us up after the heaviness, as the world awakens (perhaps post-crucifixion) into the industrial revolution and the struggles reminiscient of the loss of innocence in Blackout.
While the whole album has to be listened to cover-to-cover, if you just can't, then at least sit down for tracks 10-15. They have to be heard together, from Martin Luther King Jr.'s powerful voice losing all humanity, to perhaps the greatest song Linkin Park has ever released (Iridescent), to the de-dehumanization that takes place in 'Fallout' and into 'The Catalyst' and 'The Messenger.' Like a risen Christ-figure or the rebirth of humanity after the depths of its darkest descent, we wake up to the greatest beauty and hope that humanity can create.
This album is incredible. It needs to be heard cover to cover, all 47:48 of it. Sit down and enjoy it and tell your story through it. There's power here that needs to be heard to be truly enjoyed.