» » The Quiet Room - Introspect
The Quiet Room  - Introspect FLAC album

Tracklist

A Different Scene 4:44
Grudge 5:02
Second Time Around 6:23
Altered Past 4:46
Drowning 5:29
Laughing At Your Expense 3:53
Holding On 4:31
Extramental 3:22
Suspended Seconds 2:32
Undetermined 4:44

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
DR2907 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(CD, Album) Dominion Records DR2907 US 1997
3984-14186-2 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(CD, Album) Metal Blade Records 3984-14186-2 US 1997
US CD-019 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(CD, Album) Underground Symphony US CD-019 Italy 1997
3984141862 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(CD, Album) Metal Blade Records 3984141862 Germany 1997
3984-14186-2 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(CD, Album, Promo) Metal Blade Records 3984-14186-2 US 1997
WMB 200.314 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(Cass, Album) Wizard WMB 200.314 Bulgaria 1998
3984-14186-2 The Quiet Room Introspect ‎(CD, Album) Metal Blade Records, Dominion Records 3984-14186-2 US Unknown


The Quiet Room  - Introspect FLAC album

Musician performer: The Quiet Room

Title: Introspect

Country: US

Date of release: 1997

Style: Hard Rock, Prog Rock, Heavy Metal

Genre: Rock

Size FLAC: 1498 mb

Rating: 4.9 / 5

Votes: 262

Other Formats: MP4 VOX WAV ASF AUD DTS XM

Related to The Quiet Room - Introspect FLAC Albums

Giamah
‘Introspect’ is the 1998 debut by American progressive metal group The Quiet Room. I came across this album on eBay back in its heyday (do people still shop on there?), when searches would often have it come up, being advertised by sellers as similar to prog metal pioneers Fates Warning. That was enough to pique my interest, and to be fair, the similarities in their sound are uncanny.However, the one resemblance they don’t share is quality. Following the typical prog metal blueprint of ambitious song structures with extended musical passages and wailing, high-pitched vocals, The Quiet Room don’t really offer anything that hasn’t been done better by someone else. The musicianship is fantastic, and these guys are all more than capable at playing their instruments, but sadly not so much at song writing. Everything seems pretty jarred and disjointed. Oftentimes songs wonder off into aimless territory, twisting and turning in ways that lose my interest instead of engaging me. It’s a shame, because the album starts off pretty strong, with opening tracks ‘A Different Scene’ and ‘Grudge’ being respectable enough, but anything after struggles to keep my attention longer than a couple of minutes.No doubt progressive metal was still mostly an underground subgenre at this point, and with only a handful of bands breaking into the mainstream, The Quiet Room are one of many lost causes that were destined to become obscure, forgotten hopefuls.
Giamah
‘Introspect’ is the 1998 debut by American progressive metal group The Quiet Room. I came across this album on eBay back in its heyday (do people still shop on there?), when searches would often have it come up, being advertised by sellers as similar to prog metal pioneers Fates Warning. That was enough to pique my interest, and to be fair, the similarities in their sound are uncanny.However, the one resemblance they don’t share is quality. Following the typical prog metal blueprint of ambitious song structures with extended musical passages and wailing, high-pitched vocals, The Quiet Room don’t really offer anything that hasn’t been done better by someone else. The musicianship is fantastic, and these guys are all more than capable at playing their instruments, but sadly not so much at song writing. Everything seems pretty jarred and disjointed. Oftentimes songs wonder off into aimless territory, twisting and turning in ways that lose my interest instead of engaging me. It’s a shame, because the album starts off pretty strong, with opening tracks ‘A Different Scene’ and ‘Grudge’ being respectable enough, but anything after struggles to keep my attention longer than a couple of minutes.No doubt progressive metal was still mostly an underground subgenre at this point, and with only a handful of bands breaking into the mainstream, The Quiet Room are one of many lost causes that were destined to become obscure, forgotten hopefuls.