Album Review

Score 8
Written by Matt Mooring
Published on 6/16/2006

Ah, the cover album. Unless you’re Metallica, whose Garage Days seem to be their only good days, an album full of other people’s songs is a proposition usually met enthusiastically by only the rabid fan. Kudos to Between the Buried and Me for tackling confidently a wide range of styles and acknowledging that musicians’ influences are typically much more broad than one would predict, and way beyond what their audience may consider to be cool. It takes some stones to offer up covers by the likes of Depeche Mode and Counting Crows, and it’s good to see a band unapologetically embrace wholly non-metal and terminally un-cool music. I applaud the sentiment. I just don’t want to listen to it. Play covers live, tack ‘em onto the end of an album, or just plug your set of influences in liner notes and interviews. Whatever it takes. But seventy minutes of what turns out to be almost entirely loyal covers is just no fun for anyone—except for the fan club and the band. Which is probably good enough for them--the rest of us will just sit this one out. 

Just why someone would want to hear the very talented BTBAM waste time on dumb-rock like Motley Crue’s “Kickstart My Heart” is mind boggling. And here’s an idea: actually picking a good Crue song from one of their first couple albums—you know, before they became little sister-friendly pop rock. Technically, there’s usually not much to complain about. As with the majority of the songs, the band runs through “Kickstart” like competent karaoke. Aside from the awkward background “Whoah”s and “Yeah”s, it sounds like Motley Crue played by someone other than Motley Crue. That do anything for you? It would have been nice to hear the band use more rearrangements, as it would seem that they’d be well suited to totally deconstruct some of these songs and rebuild them into something with new life. Maybe that’s not the purpose of this exercise. But too often, the band simply runs through the material as is, doing little to put their stamp on the version. It’s rarely bad—just more like Between the Mundane and the Who Gives a Shit. And on the occasions they do go out on a limb a little, it typically detracts from the song. The vocals on “The Day I Tried to Live” render the song skip-worthy. Song selection is again questionable, as they’ve chosen a very middle of the road song from what’s easily the worst effort from the magnificent Soundgarden. But the toughest version to swallow is of Pantera’s “Cemetary Gates”, where the band manages to make chest-thumping metal sound like a college date party playing cover band. Vocals are often the weakest link. It’s not that they’re actually poor, just that the band has chosen to cover lots of bands with highly talented and/or distinctive frontmen, and although the vocals show a lot of stylistic range, they usually pale next to the originals. The times they don’t, the band really hits on all cylinders. “Geek USA” is a good and less obvious choice from Smashing Pumpkins’ fantastic Siamese Dream, and Billy Corgan ain’t easy to cover. The left field inclusion of King Crimson’s “Three of a Perfect Pair” is one of the best moments of the collection. Likewise, the band does a good job at their loyal rendition of Faith No More’s “Malpractice” from the monstrous Angel Dust

The heavy end of the playlist is made up of covers from Metallica (“Blackened”) and Sepultura (“Territory”), while the lighter fare includes stuff from Blind Melon (“Change”), the bonus track of Counting Crow’s “Colorblind”, and in a more interesting choice, Depeche Mode’s “Little 15” from 1987's Music For the Masses. Tommy Rogers doesn’t have the measure of David Gahan vocally, but hangs in there, and the guitar flourishes are a nice added touch. “Us and Them” from Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon works well, but Queen’s “Bicycle Race” is more of a just because you can doesn’t mean you should kind of thing. Look, taken one track at a time, or even in short doses of two or three, most of The Anatomy Of is competent, if rather plain, cover music. The album’s greatest flaws are that once you get past the tracklist, there aren’t many surprises in the material, and it’s simply too long as a collection of mostly loyal covers. I already own all but two of these songs in their original form, and as a listener, I found myself caring more about the songs themselves and less about the band playing them. A good cover makes you focus on both. I respect Between The Buried and Me as a talented band that has something to offer, but this collection is purely for the devout and the musically inexperienced (at least as far as this material goes). The rest of you should approach this with caution, or just wait for the follow up to Alaska.




Unknown Metalhead
mario | posted on 3/2007 | Reply
fuck metalcore and fuck this band
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ThMsqofARedDeath | posted on 3/2007 | Reply
i'll agree that not all the songs are that interesting to listen to and it's nothing that you can just throw in the cd player and listen to the whole thing all in one shot. i mean, you can and i did when i first got. it's an interesting collection of music. but in my opinion a few of the songs were executed better than the originals. to me that's what makes this record interesting and fun to listen to.
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MATTLIVE | posted on 10/2006 | Reply
U must admit that bicycle race is very metal.... i wiil adimit that this cd, is not as good as there other stuff though.. but i cant wait to hear what the have next..
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Grievous!! | posted on 7/2006 | Reply
You guys know that they did this only to get off of Victory, right? It's not supposed to be amazing. It's just supposed to be note for note, beat for beat covers. They did it as a bitch slap to Victory (the worst label EVER)
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Benjamin middleton | posted on 7/2006 | Reply
your a fucking idiot. this is more of a tribute album than a cover album. wich n my mind is much better than covering a song by keeping only the lyrical content and maybe a corus and making a terribul hard/metal/spaz core rendition of songs that influenced them. bicycle race is the best.
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Dago | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
I am not BTBAM fan but this album is enjoyable.
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Sexy Necrophiliac | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
Counting Crows? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I'm done
Unknown Metalhead
ChizzAd | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
I agree with this review, btbam put out one shitty cover album. They could have at least put their own spin on each song.
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\m/usclehead | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
You know what would be better than BTBaM covering Cemetary Gates? Richard Cheese covering "The Oprimer", that would be friggin sweet.
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Galen | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
I enjoyed this!
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Nick | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
The Queen cover is soooo well done.
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vegard | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
yeah, with a band like btbam you'd expect them to add some flavour to the covers. a fun listen, that could have been so much more special than what it ended up being.
Unknown Metalhead
cp101 | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
this album pretty much stunk. especially the fuckin' horrible queen cover I'm a queen fanboy - i have posters - and they fucked that song...my favorite song...ruined i love btbam, but i love queen more..
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dutch | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
radar wins with the orgazmo quote!
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Radar | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
I don't want to sound like a queer or nothin', but I think Depeche Mode is a sweet band!
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fractal_mortality | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
Loved the Queen and King Crimson covers. Other than that their are some good ones, and the rest are "meh." Seriously though, I think I like the way they did Three of A Perfect Pair more than KC... not that it's drastically different, i just like the sound.
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dutch | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
i find the heavy songs to be pretty boring. the earth crisis cover especially. and yeah, they did ruin cemetary gates, but all of the other songs are pretty fucking good. BTBAM is probably my favorite band that's still playing music and i own this album, but i'm not going to listen to it often. just every once in awhile when i'm in the mood for the pink floyd or king crimson cover. good review, by the way.
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davefons | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
i love matt mooring, but I enjoyed every second of this. i'm a devout fan though
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cdogs | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
personally i really enjoyed the album... i love the cemetery gates cover.. also i HATE depeche mode but i enjoyed btbam's rendition of their song.
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Jacksonlefteye | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
i think, at this point, it's a little irrelevant to say a metal band has balls when they cover Depeche Mode; first of all, the couple times i've heard it, the transition from electropop to metal can be done very well because they're just great songs to begin with (In Flames' "Everything Counts" from whoracle), secondly a good amount of metalheads are depeche mode fans it can fail miserably though, Rammstein doing "Stripped" is probably the most grimacing moment of their career, especially when you consider Rammstein is more industrial than metal
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M. Mooring | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
Soundgarden--I'd rank them this way: Louder Than Love (and it ain't even close) Badmotorfinger Ultramega OK Screaming Life Down on the Upside Superunknown
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jon | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
regardless of the fact that this is not a soundgarden review, to state "superunknown" as the worst soundgarden album is pure ridiculousness. im sure millions would state it was actually their high-point.
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Wolfhammer | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
One of the most overrated bands around today. I'm sure all the little scenesters will be wetting their pants over this and more cover songs it's just what we need, right? Lame.
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JB | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
This is a great album. The songs they chose to cover were great choices. If you're big fans of the bands they chose to cover, you owe it to yourself to get this. They pull them off beautifully. The Blackened cover is completely bad ass. My favorite Metallica song and probably their most brutal IMO. As far as caring about the songs and not the band playing them...DUH! That's what this is about! The fuckin songs! And they do great covers of them. Nothing is completely fucked up. I do wish they had covered a better Depeche Mode song though. Policy of Truth would have been nice (yes I lke some DM so blow me!) I was totally stoked when I heard this album. Give it a try.
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Radar | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
Damn, I was stoked when I saw the tracklisting for this, but I'm sick of bands playing their covers too close to the originals. First the pointless Master of Puppets tribute, now this.
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Jude | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
Fuck it, Metallica sucks anyways! They should have not covered that song.
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WT | posted on 6/2006 | Reply
I heard their cover of "Blackened". It was bad.