Sex, Death & the Infinite Void - Creeper

Sex, Death & the Infinite Void

Creeper

  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 2020-07-31
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 15
  • Album Price: 7.99
  • ℗ 2020 Roadrunner Records UK / Warner Records UK, a division of Warner Music UK Limited,
Listen on Apple Music

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Hallelujah! Creeper 0:45
2
Be My End Creeper 2:38
3
Born Cold Creeper 2:57
4
Cyanide Creeper 3:27
5
Celestial Violence Creeper 0:17
6
Annabelle Creeper 3:48
7
Paradise Creeper 4:02
8
Poisoned Heart Creeper 3:27
9
Thorns of Love Creeper 3:22
10
Four Years Ago Creeper 3:25
11
Holy War Creeper 0:22
12
Napalm Girls Creeper 3:33
13
The Crown of Life Creeper 0:06
14
Black Moon Creeper 3:35
15
All My Friends (Hidden Track) Creeper 4:14

Reviews

  • Hallelujah!

    5
    By Keith Kelley
    This should get wasn’t more praise and attention. Even two years in and post COVID it is a triumph. Can’t wait for what is next as long as they pay homage here.
  • Cobras and Fire

    5
    By szczeblewski
    In L C’s top ten of 2020! So I purchased, thanks loose!
  • A Short Step After a Huge Leap

    4
    By Baseless Scholar
    Let me state by saying I love this band. "Eternity, In Your Arms" (let's go with EIYA for short) is easily in my top 3 favorite albums of all time. When I heard the singles leading up to "Sex, Death, & the Infinite Void" (SDIV), I was ecstatic. I knew they had hung up their previous image in favor of the darker look of the "Fugitives of Heaven" and "Annabelle" & "Born Cold" did not disappoint with ideas of what SDIV would bring. That all being said SDIV feels like a little bit of a letdown from EIYA. Where their first album was a euphoric burst of neon passionate rock, SDIV seems to cage itself within their new image. Don't get me wrong, this is a good album. It shines in the first 1/3 to the last 1/3. "Be My End", "Napalm Girls", & "Black Moon" are all fantastic songs that give that new dark feel while keep that energetic pitch and titanic, catchy choruses that Creeper seems to excel at. It's the middle 3 songs that this album seems to struggle. With "Poisoned Heart", "Thorns of Love", "Four Years Ago", it feels to me like they gave almost too much to the crooning desire style they're going for. Not terrible songs by any means, they all seem to lack the distinct flair this band is more than capable of producing or the strength of their genuinely gripping slower songs like "Misery" or "Crickets". Overall, SDIV is stylish and an interesting sound for Creeper but it puts the torch-like brightness of EIYA into a lantern, dimming the quality of what I know they are truly capable of. I would still recommend it as a decent purchase for any fan and will continue to look forward to what sounds they'll move on to in the future.

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