Uloz.to is the largest czech cloud storage. Upload, share, search and download for free. Credit allows you to download with unlimited speed. Koloss is a music studio album recording by MESHUGGAH (Tech/Extreme Prog Metal/Progressive Rock) released in 2012 on cd, lp / vinyl and/or cassette. This page includes Koloss's: cover picture, songs / tracks list, members/musicians and line-up, different releases details, free MP3 download (stream), buy online links: amazon, ratings and detailled reviews by our experts, collaborators and members. Uloz.to is the largest czech cloud storage. Upload, share, search and download for free. Credit allows you to download with unlimited speed.

Meshuggah Obzen Album
Meshuggah Obzen T Shirt

After 2004’s single-song EP, I, and 2005’s follow-up, the single-song-split-into-13-tracks full-length, Catch Thirtythree, it was any wonder what the avant-garde-minded Meshuggah were going to write next. Well, it turns out it’s a collection of songs. Way to blow my mind again guys.
It isn’t as if all their previous material is full-length opuses. In effect, their true stylistic disparity started with 2002’s groovy, eight-string guitar-dominated Nothing, a rather drastic change from their previously faster, more lithe songs on the earlier albums Destroy Erase Improve and Chaosphere. I took on the characteristics of the “lithe” Meshuggah, and Catch Thirtythree more fully explored “groovy” Meshuggah.
So now, with obZen, Meshuggah are both. Sort of.
It’s actually the logical step, this coagulation of their two halves. It’s not a homogenous mix—the furious, unimaginable-before-it-existed single “Bleed” being perhaps the closest the Swedish quintet comes to a natural equilibrium here— but both elements are showcased throughout the album: the groovy “Lethargica” against the maddening title track, “Combustion” versus the more laid-back approach of “Electric Red.” Even within those very songs, however, aspects of each half of the band’s persona is at work.
Thus, there are a few possible reactions: Why didn’t they do another experimental record? Or why isn’t it more like Chaosphere/Nothing? Or what’s up with the three-armed dude on the cover?
Of course, those answers are: They did, it is, and because it’s cool. Oh, and this album rules.
In A Word: Unhalved