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Leveling the Plane of Existence (Deluxe Version)

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Download links and information about Leveling the Plane of Existence (Deluxe Version) by Abysmal Dawn. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 57:07 minutes.

Artist: Abysmal Dawn
Release date: 2011
Genre: Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal
Tracks: 14
Duration: 57:07
Buy on iTunes $11.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Age of Ruin 1:40
2. Pixilated Ignorance 3:50
3. In Service of Time 4:48
4. Rapture Renowned 4:26
5. Our Primitive Nature 0:56
6. Perpetual Dormancy 4:40
7. Leveling the Plane of Existence 4:33
8. Manufactured Humanity 2:57
9. My Own Savior 4:18
10. The Sleeper Awakens 6:36
11. In Service of Time (John Haddad Mix) [Bonus Track] 4:48
12. Perpetual Dormancy (Demo) 4:32
13. Manufactured Humanity (Demo) 2:54
14. The Sleeper Awakens (Demo) 6:09

Details

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California-based death metal band Abysmal Dawn were decent but unmemorable on their Relapse Records debut (and second album overall), 2008's Programmed to Consume. The vocals were guttural, the riffs downtuned and savage, the guitar solos full of squeals and squiggly riffs, the drumming complex but battering away with the precision of an atomic clock-powered jackhammer. This follow-up doesn't break much new ground, though there are some interesting choices, like the semi-orchestral intro track, "The Age of Ruin," which makes promises of drama and Wagnerian power that the songs themselves don't totally keep, or the percussive interstitial track "Our Primitive Nature." Fortunately, some of these songs are quite, well, catchy isn't exactly the word; this is still death metal, after all. But "In Service of Time" has ear-tugging hints of melody and a groove that'll make the listener bounce on the balls of his or her feet, and the vocals shift back and forth between the usual growls and some slightly higher-register screeching that's not quite a black metal shriek and approaches actual singing. "Rapture Renowned" has a Dimmu Borgir-like chorus, and a nice clean guitar break leading into a solo that builds slowly from long notes to tasteful shredding and back down again; it's really well-constructed, and is a sign of the band's overall evolution. They're still a death metal band and not making any attempts to be anything else, but fans of the genre may well raise their opinion of Abysmal Dawn after hearing this ambitious third effort.