User Score
Generally favorable reviews- based on 20 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 15 out of 20
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Mixed: 2 out of 20
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Negative: 3 out of 20
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AviP.Nov 30, 2008
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J.J.Dec 2, 2008If you do not like this type of music, don't listen to it. You both mention Disturbed and Mudvayne as if they're run-of-the-mill and ... overdo guitar solos? Yeah ... nice. You're both idiots. That is all.
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VBSDec 13, 2008Great Album - Mudvayne have stepped up there game and put out lean, heavy, sometimes progressive, and catchy record.
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KenAug 3, 2009
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JacobPApr 9, 2009Not as good as I was expecting, but it's not bad. I think they went too soft on this album. The songs are good, but it's not the Mudvayne I was used to. There we're softer songs on other CD's, but this one is dominated by them. While it's still a good CD, I hope they go back to the old style for their next album.
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MattFNov 30, 2008It's a good effort. The record is more mainstream than their past work, a little generic at times, but the heaviness is still there. Fans of Lost and Found won't be disappointed. It's no L.D. 50, though.
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MislavFNov 19, 2008
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FrankZ.Nov 22, 2008
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Some of the fierce headbanging that is Mudvayne's stock in trade can still be found in 'The Hate in Me,' 'We the People' and 'Dull Boy,' but the bulk of the record finds the group playing its New Game with hard-hitting exuberance.
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Mudvayne used to be viewed as somewhat of a joke band with its costumes and makeup, but they're more out front and naked now, with markedly more genuine results.
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The album's gooey, mid-tempo grind at best evokes System of a Down stripped of ambition and eccentricity, and might elicit sympathy with whatever culprit is running around that no-stoplight town.