Muse
Black Holes and Revelations

A&E Records    25646 3509-2 / HEL3002CDX  (2006)

Rock/Pop
CD, 11   Tracks, 45:30  Length
01 Take a Bow Matthew Bellamy 04:35
02 Starlight Matthew Bellamy 04:00
03 Supermassive Black Hole Matthew Bellamy 03:29
04 Map of the Problematique Matthew Bellamy 04:19
05 Soldier's Poem Matthew Bellamy 02:04
06 Invincible Matthew Bellamy 05:00
07 Assassin Matthew Bellamy 03:31
08 Exo-Politics Matthew Bellamy 03:53
09 City of Delusion Matthew Bellamy 04:49
10 Hoodoo Matthew Bellamy 03:43
11 Knights of Cydonia Matthew Bellamy 06:07
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Matthew Bellamy
Bass Christopher Wolstenholme
Drums Dominic Howard
Musician Muse
Producer Muse; Rich Costey
Engineer Rich Costey
Mixed By Rich Costey
Personal Details
Index # 2318
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased Used
Notes
Since forming in 1997, alternative rock trio Muse have ambitiously created a sound of their own, mixing elements of glam, pop, and symphonic music into a rock hybrid. While British fans have praised Muse for years, it wasn't until 2003's Absolution that Americans discovered the band and gave them their rightful props. Whether or not you championed the grand dramatics of Absolution, it was obvious that Muse are a solid and unique band, and Black Holes and Revelations, the follow-up, confirms those strengths with a passion. Rich Costey joins Muse in the co-production of this 11-song set; together, they create the band's most realized and meticulous album to date. "Take a Bow" sets the scene by layering full rock orchestration with waves of synthesizers and percussion, all of it building up to vocalist/guitarist Matthew Bellamy's aching observance of a world torn apart by its own instability. Though frequently compared to Queen's Freddie Mercury and Radiohead's Thom Yorke, Bellamy comes into his own as a vocalist here, and he, drummer Dominic Howard, and bassist Chris Wolstenholme pull equal weight as instrumentalists throughout. The sultry, swaggering "Supermassive Black Hole" and the razor-edged, paranoiac "Assassin" are prime examples of how adamant Muse are about delivering the biggest rock & roll package possible, while "Starlight" proves they can write a radio-worthy anthem without jeopardizing their ethics. Bellamy howls "You and I must fight for our rights/You and I must fight to survive" during the riotous, Rush-like megalomania of "Knights of Cydonia," and it's true -- they've totally fought for their craft on this one. It may have taken four albums for Americans to get with the program, but with Black Holes and Revelations, the whole world should be watching. -- MacKenzie Wilson (allmusic.com)