
Sing The Sorrow (Vinyl)
Co-produced by Jerry Finn (Rancid, Green Day, Jawbreaker) and Butch Vig (Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins), Sing the Sorrow retains the Bay Area outfitâs signature aggression and pathos â forging ever forward into uncharted territory like the virtuoso guitar intro of âThe Leaving Song Pt. 2â or the industrial-leaning break and Dead Can Dance-worthy outro of âDeath Of Seasons.â
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Meanwhile, from its sublime intro through beautifully subdued verses and infectious choruses, first single âGirlâs Not Greyâ is a standout that both recalls AFI coming into its own on 2000âs The Art Of Drowning and hints at a myriad of future directions. For the purists, âDancing Through Sundayâ and âBleed Blackâ come strapped with generous chant-along opportunities and heavy-as-hell, bolt-tight riffs and rhythms. And as with virtually every track on Sing The Sorrow, these are all imbued with alternately brooding and celebratory lyrical imagery of rebirth, resurrection, apocalypse, all somehow deeply personal â in other words, classic AFI.
âWhen youâre playing a style of music that doesnât really fit anywhere, you run a risk. Youâre challenging people to leave their niche, to leave their predetermined ideas of what theyâre supposed to like. Luckily, we have a lot of people who just focus on the music and appreciate us for what we are. So we get fans from all different genres of music, the jocks, the spooky kids, skaters, college kids, punk rockers, hardcore kids, metal kids, all that.â
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Co-produced by Jerry Finn (Rancid, Green Day, Jawbreaker) and Butch Vig (Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins), Sing the Sorrow retains the Bay Area outfitâs signature aggression and pathos â forging ever forward into uncharted territory like the virtuoso guitar intro of âThe Leaving Song Pt. 2â or the industrial-leaning break and Dead Can Dance-worthy outro of âDeath Of Seasons.â
Â
Meanwhile, from its sublime intro through beautifully subdued verses and infectious choruses, first single âGirlâs Not Greyâ is a standout that both recalls AFI coming into its own on 2000âs The Art Of Drowning and hints at a myriad of future directions. For the purists, âDancing Through Sundayâ and âBleed Blackâ come strapped with generous chant-along opportunities and heavy-as-hell, bolt-tight riffs and rhythms. And as with virtually every track on Sing The Sorrow, these are all imbued with alternately brooding and celebratory lyrical imagery of rebirth, resurrection, apocalypse, all somehow deeply personal â in other words, classic AFI.
âWhen youâre playing a style of music that doesnât really fit anywhere, you run a risk. Youâre challenging people to leave their niche, to leave their predetermined ideas of what theyâre supposed to like. Luckily, we have a lot of people who just focus on the music and appreciate us for what we are. So we get fans from all different genres of music, the jocks, the spooky kids, skaters, college kids, punk rockers, hardcore kids, metal kids, all that.â
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Description
Co-produced by Jerry Finn (Rancid, Green Day, Jawbreaker) and Butch Vig (Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins), Sing the Sorrow retains the Bay Area outfitâs signature aggression and pathos â forging ever forward into uncharted territory like the virtuoso guitar intro of âThe Leaving Song Pt. 2â or the industrial-leaning break and Dead Can Dance-worthy outro of âDeath Of Seasons.â
Â
Meanwhile, from its sublime intro through beautifully subdued verses and infectious choruses, first single âGirlâs Not Greyâ is a standout that both recalls AFI coming into its own on 2000âs The Art Of Drowning and hints at a myriad of future directions. For the purists, âDancing Through Sundayâ and âBleed Blackâ come strapped with generous chant-along opportunities and heavy-as-hell, bolt-tight riffs and rhythms. And as with virtually every track on Sing The Sorrow, these are all imbued with alternately brooding and celebratory lyrical imagery of rebirth, resurrection, apocalypse, all somehow deeply personal â in other words, classic AFI.
âWhen youâre playing a style of music that doesnât really fit anywhere, you run a risk. Youâre challenging people to leave their niche, to leave their predetermined ideas of what theyâre supposed to like. Luckily, we have a lot of people who just focus on the music and appreciate us for what we are. So we get fans from all different genres of music, the jocks, the spooky kids, skaters, college kids, punk rockers, hardcore kids, metal kids, all that.â
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