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That shift happened at the point when Muse released Black Holes and Revelations in July 2006. The band had little choice as the reality was that their music could no longer fit into the 1,000 ...
First things first: Muse is not the next Radiohead. Yes, both bands play PoMo prog-rock with varying degrees of electronic textures; and yes, lead singer Matthew Bellamy has a passionate and ...
Yet "Black Holes and Revelations," the band's fourth album, arrives at a place not far from "The Black Parade." Muse used to resemble a more arena-oriented Radiohead, and it still has its wispy ...
The trio has apparently let new sounds simmer after a yearlong hiatus, and while “Black Holes and Revelations” (in ... guitar and double bass drums of Muse’s past, most notably on ...
Now, with the follow-up, July's Black Holes And Revelations, they've gone one better. Even more adventurous than its predecessor, album number four finds a mighty, more visceral Muse exploring new ...
Muse epitomize pompous stadium rock in ... flash-frozen crud that can be ridiculously fun to listen to. Black Holes and Revelations is the band's fourth album*,* and if you thought by now they ...
Muse are classic whipping boys for the Keeping ... and could – whisper it – be a love song. A love song about black holes, revelations, the end of the world and that sort of thing.
BLACK Holes and Revelations pushes Muse further towards the edge of the musical universe and way from the rest of civilisation. Their brand of astro rock has always kept Muse out of mainstream ...