The More I See

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Eye That Offends 00:00 Tools
Suck on These Words 00:00 Tools
Still 00:00 Tools
Reversible 00:00 Tools
Violate 00:00 Tools
A Touch Too Much 00:00 Tools
Born Freaks 00:00 Tools
Humans 00:00 Tools
Rise Up and Start 00:00 Tools
Mourning and Melancholia 00:00 Tools
Near Extinction 00:00 Tools
Crossed Over 00:00 Tools
Paralysed 00:00 Tools
Fear of Death 00:00 Tools
Chez Wrong 00:00 Tools
Friend Turned Enemy 00:00 Tools
Alone You Will Enter 00:00 Tools
Veiled by Greed 00:00 Tools
What is Worse Than the Truth 00:00 Tools
Smile 00:00 Tools
Last Hope 00:00 Tools
The Wolves Are Hungry 00:00 Tools
A Price on Your Head 00:00 Tools
The Unholy Feast 00:00 Tools
Decadence Within 00:00 Tools
7 Deadly Sins 00:00 Tools
Smack My Bitch Up 00:00 Tools
Spirit of Freedom 00:00 Tools
Fall 00:00 Tools
Bloodline 00:00 Tools
Soul on auction 00:00 Tools
The Siege is On 00:00 Tools
Beautiful Language of Lies 00:00 Tools
Forbidden 00:00 Tools
Empty 00:00 Tools
Ratcatcher 00:00 Tools
Wicker Man 00:00 Tools
What Is Worse Than The Truth? 00:00 Tools
Igniting the flame 00:00 Tools
Empty Chair 00:00 Tools
Audio Guide to the Memorial 00:00 Tools
Twisted Sleep 00:00 Tools
Near Extinction - Live 00:00 Tools
The Eye That Offend 00:00 Tools
Bloodline - Live 00:00 Tools
The Fall 00:00 Tools
Smack My Bitch Up (The Prodigy Cover) 00:00 Tools
Melancholia 00:00 Tools
THE MORE I SEE 00:00 Tools
The More I See - Tread The Darker Path 00:00 Tools
The Seige Is On 00:00 Tools
Ingniting The Flame 00:00 Tools
a touch to much 00:00 Tools
Suck Session 00:00 Tools
Un - Known 00:00 Tools
Still (Demo Version: J.D Mix) 00:00 Tools
Wolves Are Hungry 00:00 Tools
A Touch Too Much (AcDc) 00:00 Tools
Roll Over, Beg, Lie Down 00:00 Tools
a touch to much - the more i see 00:00 Tools
Crossed Over-Rise Up And Start 00:00 Tools
The Wicker Man (Iron Maiden cover) 00:00 Tools
Rise Up and Start - Track Commentary 00:00 Tools
Crossed Over - Track Commentary 00:00 Tools
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“This is technical, precision thrash with a classic feel but a modern production sheen and even a touch of progressive musicianship in among the sheet-metal riffage and barking aggression. KKKK” – Paul Travers, reviewing ‘Unholy Feast’ in Kerrang! May 3rd 2008. British Thrash Metal masters The More I See release their second, full-on monster of an album, ‘The Unholy Feast’, on Transcend Records, distributed by Cargo, on June 16th. ‘The Unholy Feast’ contains twelve tracks bursting with massive aggression and power that never comes at the expense of huge hooks and instantly addictive choruses, is packed with classic, crunching thrash riffs loaded with melody, hooks, drive and passion, and every song matters; there are no fillers. The More I See were formed by guitarist Gizz Butt, who, inspired by a great number of years spent peddling his musical wares in cult Punk band English Dogs and then the Prodigy to people all over the planet, took care to recruit like minded missionaries who shared the same passion, technical ability and desire to tear the roof off every venue that was brave enough to book them. Gizz came away from the Prodigy with the same sense of inclusivity that Prodigy main man Liam Howlett encouraged: “I think opening up is important and treating everyone like they’re on a level so you are bringing people in, involving people in the song writing. It is crucial to have the feeling that everyone feels like it is their band. Their voices are heard and their riffs are included. We don’t slam the door in people’s faces.” Prior to his time in The Prodigy, Gizz cut his teeth as teenage guitarist in cult 80’s band The English Dogs, who combined punk and metal in a belligerent collision and counted a young upstart band named Metallica among their fans. Gizz has gone back to this explosive mix of punk and aggression, thrash speed and technical metal ability for The More I See and ‘The Unholy Feast’ is ripe with it. The More I See were formed in Cambridgeshire in 2002, when Gizz recruited vocalist Chad Sunderland, guitarist Gavin King and bassist Lee Churchill. Their debut album, ‘The Wolves Are Hungry’, was proclaimed a “Stunning Debut From The UK’s New Metal Gods” by Dom Lawson in Kerrang! on September 25th 2004, continuing “The More I See are a revelation. The key to this albums’ greatness is in the songwriting. An extraordinary statement of intent. KKKK”. Even though ‘The Wolves Are Hungry’ received rave reviews, sales were disappointing, major European tour plans never came to fruition, and the band’s relationships with their German record label, manager and agent all fell apart. Gizz decided to go back to his roots and speed the musical pace up, both live and on record, so he recruited drummer Spike T. Smith, previously of early UK thrash pioneers Sacrilege, and Punk legends The Damned, to the line-up. With the chemistry right at last, it was time to demo the dark songs which had been in gestation for the last few years. The More I See soon inked a new deal with maverick label Transcend Records, who subsequently guided them towards the recording of ‘The Unholy Feast’, an astonishingly accomplished album will ride the crest of the wave of the current Thrash Metal revival all the way to the top. Homepage: http://www.themoreisee.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.