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Division of Labor

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Download links and information about Division of Labor by Codeseven. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 6 tracks with total duration of 37:12 minutes.

Artist: Codeseven
Release date: 1999
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 6
Duration: 37:12
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Lights 6:09
2. How Many Miles to Babylon 6:55
3. Steady State 5:29
4. It Could Happen 5:09
5. Sod Within the Hill 4:15
6. Leaches of Karma 9:15

Details

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Division of Labor is the follow-up to Codeseven's 1998 full-length album, A Sense of Coalition, and to say the risk in making this album was great is being polite. In many hardcore fans' minds, Coalition was the epitome of perfect emocore. How does one follow up such an album? Codeseven chose to go the quick way and release a small collection of new material packaged as a mini-LP. Containing six tracks of unrelenting frustration and beauty, Division of Labor marks a departure from the punk stylings found on a number of tracks on the Coalition album and takes more of a step into full-on hardcore and emo. In tradition, Codeseven begins this album with the intensity of a trapped badger — mean, heavy, and foaming at the mouth — yet by the time the last track finishes, this wild beast has been calmed and tamed to a certain level of safety. Unfortunately what this album fails to do is fully display all of Codeseven's many talents. While the album does outdo itself musically, emotionally, and vocally, Jeff Jenkins' melodic voice is drowned out by the overbearing thunderhouse provided by the three Tuttle brothers and Eric Weyer. David Owen has gotten his scream stabilized, with less cracking and screeching, yet something seems missing. The best way to explain this is by listening to the piano that wraps up "Leaches of Karma." Although at first sounding beautiful and light, one eventually hears mistakes and hesitations, knocking the otherwise exquisite piano playing down to moderate yet flawed expertise. Perhaps the album just takes time to grow on the listener; it took several listens to Coalition before many discovered its treasure chest of emotion, but if Codeseven wants to remain in the game they need to release an album that is consistent and has fewer weak spots. The average emocore fan will enjoy this, but it may not win over the next-door neighbor who is into whatever is played on MTV. This music is more art than anything; if it was a painting, it would be one of Monet's lesser-known ones — beautiful, but overshadowed by previous offerings. ~ Jason D. Taylor, Rovi