Karma and Effect

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Price: $4.98
Price subject to change!
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0601501311529 Label: Wind-Up Manufacturer: Wind-Up Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Wind-Up Release Date: 2005-05-24 Studio: Wind-Up
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Boring Comment: I picked up this CD a month ago, and have tried many times to listen to it, but I haven't even finished the CD yet. I find it bland and boring and will probably return it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: seether karma & effect Comment: i adore Seether! listen to this all the time! and timeliness of the shipping was great!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Seether: Karma and Effect Comment: I got the brand-new, shrink-wrapped CD within a week and a couple of days of ordering.
Customer Rating:      Summary: awesome as expected Comment: I must say that I like Disclaimer the best, but seether certainly didn't mess this one up. It is a very strong CD that digs in deep to the soul.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The band has grown since the first release Comment: Seether is a bad that grows on you over time. The second album seems to have matured the band in that the songs are more interested to listen to and the angst exhibited by the band is more pronounced. It is a good album to listen to when you are exercising or doing something you don't like to do (i.e. shoving snow) it that is gets your energy going and makes what you are doing more enjoyable. Hopefully they will continue to mature and separate themselves from the pack of other post-grunge bands.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Seether's follow-up to their promising, moderately successful 2002 debut, Disclaimer, and its spottier, hastily repackaged 2004 sequel, was reportedly beset by fighting with their label--friction that dictated everything from profanity-free lyrics to a title change (the original name was the telling Catering to Cowards.) Yet the band effectively rises above those constraints, if only by largely sticking to Disclaimer's tried-and-true formula of seasoning the generous blasts of angst-metal (such as the raging opener "Because of Me") that are its true stock in trade with more evocative ballads like "The Gift" and "Plastic Man." The latter tracks hearken back to "Broken," singer Shaun Morgan's duet with girlfriend and Evanescence singer Amy Lee, yet find their own restless, emotive substance without her. --Jerry McCulley
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