
We reply to emails in minutes and hours, not days.We're always on the phone to answer questions and help with any orders, Monday through Saturday.Check out thousands of independent 5 star reviews about us.
Nickelback the long road full#
If you don't like it, just send it back for a full refund.
All orders carry our 100% customer satisfaction guarantee. Your order will be shipped the same day (Monday to Friday) in custom made superior packaging. We have over 500,000 happy customers in over 100 countries worldwide, are a platinum seller on Ebay and have an average positive rating of over 99% on Amazon sites worldwide. eil.com (also known as Esprit) has been the world's biggest and best seller of premium quality and top condition rare and vintage vinyl records, rare CD's and music memorabilia since 1985 - that's 37 years! And we are proud of it. NLCCDTH251843 (quote this reference in any e-mails, letters, faxes or phone calls to help identify this item)Ĭomplete Stock to contact our sales team.Ĭall 01474 815010 quoting EIL.COM reference number NLCCDTH251843 Regardless of country of origin all tracks are sung in English, unless otherwise stated in our description. The Long Road (click here for more of the same title)Īdd item to your basket for a postage/shipping quote Nickelback (click here for complete listing) Sold Out - 'Request Next' to get an email if it comes back into stock. Nickelback The Long Road Japanese CD album (CDLP) Nickelback is always commercial but when the quality is there, we can't complain about it.Nickelback Dark Horse Tour 2010 - Local Crew UK t-shirt Promo "The Long Road" is thus a good ten excellent tracks and some hits to be recorded in the Pantheon of the Post-Grunge and thus of the music. It's a pity, because not only does Nickelback succeed again in concluding with a very convincing "See You At The Show", but they also offer us three nice bonuses with the energetic "Yanking Out My Heart" and "Learn The Hard Way", but especially the excellent cover of "Saturday Night's Alright (For Fighting)". It is at this point that we realize that the breath is perhaps a little short with our Canadians and "Throw Yourself Away" confirms this impression by struggling to take off, as well as "Another Hole In The Head" which from repetition to redundance ends up running out of steam itself. Nickelback then serves us his specialty, the power ballad "Should've Listened", unfortunately a little too linear despite an interesting tension. Basic and enjoyable bludgeoning which lowers a tone but keeps its intensity for a "Figured You Out" always darker and heavier.
"Someday" is one of those winds that carry you away and lift you up, "Believe It Or Not" is one of those gusts that jostle you and make you lose your orientation, being sometimes destabilizing but always interesting. We are now in the eye of the cyclone and the tracks follow one another like so many gusts. We enter directly into the heart of the matter with the huge "Flat On The Floor", two minutes of a concentrated sheer energy seizing you and taking absolutely everything in its wake! Short enough not to be suffocating and to keep all its punch, it leaves us with our mouths open versus "Do This Anymore" which tries to reproduce the magic of "How You Remind Me" and which succeeds in doing so by revealing itself in the end more striking thanks to a scathing phrasing of a Chad in top notch form. At least we could reproach them for having found an effective recipe that they strive to reproduce. After having sold nearly five million copies of his "Silver Side Up", is it necessary to have listened to this " The Long Road " to know that it is obviously bad? Well, no! Our four Canadians don't make bad music even if it is available for most people.
Is what is commercial necessary bad ? Should we consider that if an artist sells a lot, it's automatically because he managed to make an album bad enough to please the greatest number of people? Let's take the example of Nickelback.