| Out of Exile | 
| Artist: Audioslave Label: Interscope Records Category: Music
List Price: $13.98 Buy New: $4.87 as of 2/11/2012 08:42 EST details You Save: $9.11 (65%)
New (40) Used (105) Collectible (1) from $0.75
Seller: MovieMars Sales Rank: 2,196
Language: English (Original Language) Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 5.1 x 0.4
MPN: 6 3 09881563 UPC: 060249881563 EAN: 0602498815632 ASIN: B00097DX3U
Release Date: May 24, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | AUDIOSLAVE OUT OF EXILE |
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| Tracks:
| • | Your Time Has Come | | • | Out Of Exile | | • | Be Yourself | | • | Doesn't Remind Me | | • | Drown Me Slowly | | • | Heaven's Dead | | • | The Worm | | • | Man Or Animal | | • | Yesterday To Tomorrow | | • | Dandelion | | • | #1 Zero | | • | The Curse |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) pressing. Universal. 2008.
Amazon.com In what was widely predicted to be a short-lived supergroup/side-project, Audioslave has instead gratifyingly yielded a bonafide band. The follow-up to their promising, if not quite artistically congealed '02 debut finds singer/songwriter Chris Cornell contributing a slate of songs that would have done his former Soundgarden proud, while guitarist Tom Morello and his former Rage Against the Machine bandmates cast them in a focused rhythmic groove that suggests that the old school can still yield a timely lesson or two. Cornell's best songs may still lurk in the shadows (the funeral hypno-blues of "Heaven's Dead," the martial metal of antiwar opener "Your Time Has Come," "The Worm" as anthem for self-loathing), yet they're now brightened with such surprisingly sunny fare as "Dandelion," "Doesn't Remind Me"'s charged, existentialist daydream and even a hook-rich, dangerously optimistic back-to-the-future power ballad in "Be Yourself." Morello's work on the title track and elsewhere is a study in taste and less-is-more efficiency, a telling hint of how forcefully these iconic '90s stars have sublimated their egos as their new music has blossomed; who said there are no second acts in American (rock) lives? --Jerry McCulley
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