The good thing about being a band like Rammstein is that no one expects that each album sounds different. With a sound practically patented what we expect in every Rammstein album is furious music. Hostile music. And this is precisely what these industrial metal veterans does in "Liebe Ist Für Alle Da" their sixth studio album, which, considering what they did in very regular (not to say mediocre) "Reise, Reise "(2004) and" Rosenront "(2005), is not to be overlooked. It seems that this 4 years pause has enable these Germans to recalibrate the gears of the machinery that produced records like "Sehnsucht" or "Matter" and deliver 11 songs (15 in the special edition of the album) of aggressive and tense metal, with the guitars of Richard Kruspe and Paul Landers bringing back their impetuosity with sharp and overwhelming riffs, while Christian Lorenz left electro adornments to do arrangements a little bit more complex and symphonic that together with the always threatening and theatrical performances of Till Lindemann gives the music a slightly sinister touch. Although at times the sextet drops his guard to make themes with semi-acoustic and melodic touches as "Roter Sand", quiet and dispensable, or "Frühling in Paris", a power-ballad in which Lindemann shows that sometimes even him has a "sweet-heart" by singing "softly" (for his standard) a few lines in French, "Liebe ist für alle da" is equilibrate by pieces like "Rammlied", "Ich Tu Dir Weh" or "Wiener Blut" with the classic "Rammstein sound": hard, crushing, unsuitable for delicate ears. Not the best record from Rammstein but the more decent that the band has delivered this decade. -CORANNIEIT-
Rammstein, Liebe ist für alle da
Universal Music, 2009
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