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Lost In the Sound of Separation

Underoath

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Underoath

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Breathing In a New Mentality Underoath 2:37 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Anyone Can Dig a Hole But It Takes a Real Man to Call It Home Underoath 3:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 A Fault Line. A Fault of Mine Underoath 3:21 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Emergency Broadcast: The End Is Near Underoath 5:44 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 The Only Survivor Was Miraculously Unharmed Underoath 3:08 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 We Are the Involuntary Underoath 4:09 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 The Created Void Underoath 4:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Coming Down Is Calming Down Underoath 3:15 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Desperate Times Desperate Measures Underoath 3:27 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Too Bright to See Too Loud to Hear Underoath 4:30 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Desolate Earth: The End Is Here Underoath 4:07 $0.99 View In iTunes
1 Video The Making of Lost In the Sound of Separation Underoath 15:25 Album Only View In iTunes

Album Review

2006's Define the Great Line proved to be a turning point for faith-based, post-hardcore/screamo outfit Underoath. While the tendency to dissolve into the abyss of angtsy emo-pop was still there, there was a darkness lurking in the nooks and crannies between the crackling snare hits and heavy "drop-d" riffing that hinted at a little pre-evolution, a notion that comes to fruition with their sixth studio record and fourth for Solid State (the metal subdivision of Tooth & Nail Records). Lost in the Sound of Separation gets off to a rocky start with its two most forgettable songs, "Breathing in a New Mentality" and "Anyone Can Dig a Hole But It Takes a Real Man to Call It Home," both of which are big, loud, mean, monotonous, and virtually interchangeable with any other formulaic "loud, quiet, scream, loud, quiet, scream" alt metal tune. However, it doesn't take long for Separation to rescue itself from painfully serious, aggro-MTV mediocrity, as those two tracks are quickly followed up by the riveting "A Fault Line, A Fault of Mine" and "Emergency Broadcast: The End Is Near," two slightly experimental, highly melodic cuts (make that four, as "Too Bright to See Too Loud to Hear" and near-instrumental closer "Desolate Earth: The End Is Near" are mini-masterpieces of hope and anguish) that not only signal growth for the Florida ensemble, but deliver on the dark promises that haunted Define the Great Line, exposing a more mature, post-apocalyptic nightmare that manages to give equal time to both loss and redemption, declaring allegiance to neither.

Recent Customer Reviews

Get It If You Like Loud Music!
     
by Knot a Not

Originally, I didn't like UnderOATH. The reason was I found the vocals way too emo-ish, and the screams too high-pitched. Imagine my surprise when I heard Define the Great Line! I heard deeper screams and the vocals weren't whiny like I oringinally thought. So now, I have Lost In the Sound of Separation. I am simply blown away. This is DEFINITELY worth getting! From the loud and proud "Breathing In a New Mentality," to the epic "Too Bright, Too Loud" this album is perfect! This is a must buy!

AMAZIN!!!!
     
by polabear5

By far there best album if not the best album of all time! It is my favorite album ever. Cant wait 4 them 2 have a new album

Scremo that is pretty good but not my favorite of theirs Please read the whole posting
     
by floridamtbiker

I have been a fan for a while at least since "Their only chasing safety". I actually found their first to albums Prior to Define the great Line better. Not that I don't enjoy their albums.But they went a diffenerent direction after those two. i fealt like I was listening to a hardcore/scremo version of a Pink Floyd album, as all the songs had a cohesive feel, that may have lacked a stand alone single that their first two albums had. It seems they went a different direction after Spencer left to start Maylene and the Sons of Disaster, a completely different sound than Underoath other than screaming vocals. I was working a show as a stage hand at a Maylene show and was cutting off the duck tape from Spencers microphone, he likes to use it as a wip and other ludicris things heavy metel bands like to do to equipment, when I sliced a hole through my hanf blood spewed everywhere, fortunately it only took a few stiches but Spencer came up to me and asked if there was anything he could do, he's a good guy. as for underoath, they care about their music and fans but like many bands they seem to try to hard to to try new things but it seems by the time this album came out they had a cult following and the "tough" emo kids needed a little music in their reperetoir to justify that they weren't part of the emo sterotype. The album is heavy but I have heard heavy. And I am not dissing emo or the style or whatever you want to call it I am emo i just don't feel the need to dress in any sort of way but i am 25 so I it would look weird following a trend set by a much younger crowd, plus in the words from the male lead in Nick and norahs playlist " I don't prescribe to labels." But hey if you want to stand out or at least fit in with your peers which is completely understandable I just wouldn't suggest judging others as you may be judged. But perhaps that was your hope from the start and thats why you listen to music that most people don't think isn't realy music, but it grows on you. Listen to the words if you can understand what they are saying,(unlike some hardcore bands that like to spread hate or general disaray) to i-tunes doesn't provide booklets to study the lyrics, so you have to search the internet. Most young peoples anguish come from relationships that grow out of control and I think that is some of what at least their earlier cd's were about. So gaurd your herat and mind, be careful what you expose yourself to, even the sweetest fruit can have a bitter after taiste and make you sick, think about dogs, they love the taiste of anti-freeze but if they drink much at all it will kill them. Bands I also enjoy are Inked in Blood and As I lay dieing. In conclusion I suggest you check out Underoaths earlier albums as well and please don't by them just to p**s your parents off or maybe do cause that gives them the capital to make more albums. I can't wait to see what they have instore for us next, if their is a next, maybe the will get back to their roots a little. I listened to Strongarm, demon Hunter, Dead Poetic, Zao, Early P.O.D., The Causualties, and some other heavy bands i can't remember the names of. Also understand according to wiki-pedia if you belieive it, Emo was a result of guys in punk bands getting tired of complaining about the government and so started wrting about things that effected their everyday lives, relationships, jobs(you can only be a gutter punk for so long), Unless you were drafted by the military or audited by the i.r.s. when was the last last time the government really effected your life. Most of those things don't happen to young people or haven;t happened in a long time, sure the government may have a little to much power when it comes to your privacy, but whose going to take the blame if something goes wrong. Also, don't let musicians think for you. They have a power over the audience that would make Charles manson envious. Read, watch the news and read the papers but beware of their bias. their is not such thing as altruims in the entertainment business especialy the news media. They want you to see things the way they see them, so I suggest if they make it clear what their position is, you can trust where they are coming from, even if you don't agree with it. But very few musicions will outrightly expose theri positons, and those that do, hope you will only agree with them them, they don't want to be challenged by people who disagree.(Feel free to disagree with this qoute it is only an opinion and I can't back it specifically by fact but look at the hippies of the sixties and the chaos they caused sure they had some good effects but what was the result of ree love and rampant drug use and the abuse of military people returning after being drafted). The album is ok I have to listen to it a few more times before i think it may border on my regular play list but the making of was a nice addition.Finaly in endqoute, God be with you and may he bless you in all your endeavors, this from a sinner who daily struggles with the angst of sin and the elusoveness of grace which is always given to those who ask. P.S. Underoath may not even agree with my opions so just ponder the thoughts and enjoy the music, hopefully with friends or maybe someone you have never talked to that looks like htey need to talk, be couragous.

Biography

Formed: 1998 in Tampa, FL

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Since their inception, Florida's Underoath has evolved from a run-of-the-mill Christian metalcore band into a fluid, dynamic, and energized rock group that adeptly blends emotive melody, charged punk rock rhythm, and chunky, engaging bottom end. Underoath formed in 1998 in vocalist Dallas Taylor's bedroom....
Full Bio
Lost In the Sound of Separation, Underoath
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