Create account Log in

L'autrichienne

[Edit]

Download links and information about L'autrichienne by Jucifer. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 01:10:25 minutes.

Artist: Jucifer
Release date: 2008
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 21
Duration: 01:10:25
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Blackpowder 2:16
2. Thermidor 0:32
3. To Earth 3:04
4. Deficit 2:29
5. Champ de Mars 3:52
6. Fall of the Bastille 0:56
7. To the End 3:18
8. Armada 5:56
9. L'autrichienne 5:00
10. Behind Every Great Man 3:10
11. October 4:09
12. Birds of a Feather 2:11
13. Traitors 2:28
14. The Law of Suspects 2:31
15. Noyade 4:21
16. The Mountain 9:07
17. Window (Where the Sea Falls Forever) 4:59
18. Fleur de Lis 2:39
19. Procession a la Guillotine 3:50
20. Coma 1:40
21. The Assembly 1:57

Details

[Edit]

There are few bands you can honestly say can morph so flawlessly from song to song that you could fool the average listener into thinking each track was a different band. The 2008 release by Jucifer, L'Autrichienne, is certainly one such album. With hard rock and metal becoming quite predictable and same-sounding by the time of the album's release, it's a treat to hear a band continuously switch gears. Influenced equally by skuzz-indie rockers Royal Trux as much as the behemoth metal of Mastodon, Jucifer keep you guessing as to what their next move will be. Cases in point: an anthemic Sabbath-ish album-opening ass-kicker ("Blackpowder"), a track that shows Jucifer can shred with the most extreme metallists out there ("Thermidor"), slow-as-torture Melvins-esque metal ("Deficit"), and even chimey guitar stuff ("To the End"). It takes a very talented vocalist to keep up with all the genre-shifting, and Amber Valentine is certainly up to the task, as it appears that there isn't a rock style Valentine can't sing or the band can't riff out. For those who (understandably) feel that metal has become increasingly one-dimensional in modern times, L'Autrichienne proves Jucifer is in a class all by themselves. Cheers!