Slipknot
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  1. Get Inside
  2. Orchirds
  3. Cold Reader
  4. Blotter
  5. Choose
  6. Monolith
  7. Inhale
  8. Bother
  9. Blue Study
10. Take a Number
11. Idle Hands
12. Tumult
  13. Omega

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Here are some reviews gathered form other sites about the Stone Sour album (so don't e-mail me complaining about a wrong use of words or slang that insults the music of Slipknot because its not my words) You will find mine and Nathans reviews at the bottom -

 

:: Rowan Shaeffer :: of  www.CounterCulture.co.uk

Get Inside is the song you may have already heard, and is the closest to Slipknot that Stone Sour get. The chugging rhythm, manic kick-drums and shout-along vocals bring to mind the melodic 'Knot of Left Behind. An obvious choice for a single - no need to alienate your potential audience after all . . .
    After Orchids, and the rather good Cold Reader, things get a little more sedate. Shouting is exchanged for singing, and Taylor handles the change of styles admirably. The resulting music is more tuneful, but does have a tendency to slide into that all-consuming post-grunge sound. As a result, some perfectly acceptable tracks slide by without making much of an impact.
    One of Stone Sour's highlights is the gentle acoustic Bother. This was also one a stand-out on the recent Spider-Man soundtrack. Totally at odds with the rest of the material here, it's devoid of overdriven guitar and slamming drums, relying on acoustic guitars, understated strings and Taylor's unaffected vocals to make its point.
    The closing Omega is a disconcerting spoken word piece; half poem, half bitter diatribe: "Government is another way to say: Better than you. It's like ice but no pick, a murder charge that won't stick, it's like a whole other world where you can smell the food . . . but you can't touch the silverware. What luck: Fascism you can vote for."

Stone Sour has it's moments, but not enough of them to make me go back and listen to this CD repeatedly. However, I thought the same of Slipknot's Iowa, so if you think that's a killer disc then maybe you should just ignore me and start saving those pennies.

I'm no genius on this subject but ill take a crack at reviewing Mr.Shaeffer's Review on Stone Sours' album. This is a well balanced review that explains the Stone Sour album pretty well. Its true, the song 'Get Inside' does remind of the songs that Slipknot would release, and also Corey does surpass himself in the song 'Bother' (who knew that man had such a great sing voice). One thing that does piss me off about this review is the last paragraph. This album is a repetitive album and i think the rest of the people who have bought this album and have enjoyed it will agree. Its true if you don't like the genre then you won't wanna keep picking it up and putting it on. But, if you like the music and you've got the ears that enjoy the odd headbanging tune and mellow tune mixed into one album, then you'll want to keep playing it again and again.
 
:: Craig Harris (site manager) :: 

 
 
 
 
Stone Sour isn't the first successful Slipknot side project; the Murderdolls (just barely) beat them to the starting gate. Like that group, though, Stone Sour actually started out long before Slipknot, but was ultimately revisited as an alternative to the Slipknot grind. Knotmen (if you will) Corey Taylor and Jim Root and their Stone Sour brethren offer nu-metal that's fully as hard-hitting as that of their day-job group, but with considerably more thoughtful compositional techniques and melodic sensibility. Sure, Taylor occasionally breaks into a gut-wrenching scream, but just as often he's twisting his voice around a serpentine melodic line that brings Alice in Chains to mind more than anything in the nu-metal lexicon.

 
 
:: Louis Pattison :: of  www.Amazon.co.uk
 
The first thing that you should know is that Stonesour is not a Slipknot side-project. Sure, Corey Taylor and James Root are, respectively, the dreadlocked vocalist and the jester-masked guitarist of the Iowa-born metal marauders. But the pairs involvement in Stonesour predates their time in Slipknot, even though this eponymous record is the bands debut.

Immediately, its clear that this is a radically different beast to Slipknot: boasting a grungy, punk-metal edge that points towards a love for Alice In Chains and Metallica, Stonesour turns down the militaristic assault in favour of an intimate, earnest and comparatively conventional heavy rock collection. The beefy opener, "Get Inside" is a meaty rock-out for the dedicated Knothead. But further in, theres some real surprises: "Cold Reader" and "Monolith" match their intense riffs with a bare lyrical edge far more revealing that any Slipknot song. All the same, neither can prepare you for "Bother"--a confessional, acoustic song that faintly calls to late-period Metallica, Corey singing "Wish I was too dead to care / If indeed I care at all" over keening violins and a mellow guitar line that, impossibly, recalls Eric Clapton. Easy listening? Yeah, but all but the most narrow-minded Slipknot fans should lap it up. And for fans of Corey, well, this might just be the album theyve been waiting for.