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Electric Wizard

Electric Wizard  Main Performer

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  • Audio Compact Disc [Bonus Tracks]   $21.79
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Audio Compact Disc [Bonus Tracks]

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$21.79

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1 Stone Magnet Electric Wizard 4:55
2 Mourning Prayer Electric Wizard 5:07
3 Mountains of Mars Electric Wizard 3:48
4 Behemoth Electric Wizard 8:56
5 Devil's Bride Electric Wizard 6:35
6 Black Butterfly Electric Wizard 8:21
7 Electric Wizard Electric Wizard 9:41
8 Wooden Pipe Electric Wizard :08
9 Illimitable Nebulie [#][*] Electric Wizard 4:52
10 Mourning Prayer, Pt. 1 [#][*] Electric Wizard 5:19
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Electric Wizard

Audio Compact Disc [Bonus Tracks]

Style: Heavy Metal

Electric Wizard

UPC: 803341226319

Release Date: 06/05/2006

Original Release Date: 06/05/2006

Tracks: [Stone Magnet, Mourning Prayer, Mountains of Mars, Behemoth, Devil's Bride, Black Butterfly, Electric Wizard, Wooden Pipe, Illimitable Nebulie [#][*], Mourning Prayer, Pt. 1 [#][*]]
Contributors:

Eduardo Rivadavia

When Electric Wizard first emerged, seemingly fully formed from the hallowed wombs of the doom metal gods (well, from Dorset, England, anyway), all most listeners could do was stand in dumbfounded awe -- such was the power and magnitude with which the trio delivered its monolithic epics. Taking up the torch from doom pioneers like Saint Vitus, Sleep, and more recently Britain's own Cathedral, the eternally stoned-out trio went about setting a new standard for slothful, detuned heavy metal noisemaking; yet -- amazingly, compared to subsequent efforts -- their eponymous debut's crushing wall of sludge would soon seem almost lightweight. Most of the songs on Electric Wizard crawl along at a snail's pace, their mind-numbing riffs exploring the lowest imaginable sonic frequencies still within human range. Except for the trippy space rock guitar of "Mountains of Mars," the entire record revels in the purest, uncompromising post-Sabbath doom metal dirge, a great part of which may prove too sluggish and impenetrable for inexperienced listeners. But for knowledgeable consumers of the genre, weed-worshipping anthems like "Stone Magnet," "Devil's Bride," and the group's awesome namesake, "Electric Wizard" (which is introduced by a long, highly suspicious exhaled breath), amount to a mind-shattering experience. Prepare to be enlightened. [The 2006 edition features two previously unreleased demo tracks as a bonus.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, Rovi