Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 7 of
7
with 100 triples per page.
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f accessdate "2007-05-22".
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f author "Rob Theakston".
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f date "2001-07-02".
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f isCitedBy Undertow_(Tool_album).
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f publisher "AllMusic.com".
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f quote "Just as grunge was reaching its boiling point and radio-friendly punk-pop loomed on the horizon, Tool released Undertow, which firmly reinforced metal's prominence as a musical style [...] With its technical brilliance, musical complexities, and aggressive overtones, Undertow not only paved the way for several bands to break through to the mainstream [...], it also proved that metal could be simultaneously intelligent, emotional, and brutal.".
- fc888d2d9d6731ff1440a2eda2ba8931e0273fd598c54e9152911612671f710f title "Undertow Review".