
Hosted by John Bernardo & Josh Delaney · EN

This is where everything changed. We have the lineup you now know as BTBAM today. Their sound has skyrocketed vs what we heard on The Silent Circus. The amount of melodic flavour on display, the musicianship, lyrically, instrumentally.... AHHHHHHH just listen to us gab over this album okay? PS: The remix/remastered version is the definitive version of this album ------------------------------------------ Twitter @johnsbernardo / @jarsh.zone Instagram @doesmachines / @jarsh.zone Discord - https://discord.gg/JqWeqD9bvQ

Wow. What a change in direction for the band on their second album. This one dropped us flat on our asses, made us roll over, eat the dirt then make us do it all over again. Fainting. Anyways let us know what you think of the episode and the album on any of our social accounts below ------------------------------------------ Twitter @johnsbernardo / @jarsh.zone Instagram @doesmachines / @jarsh.zone Discord - https://discord.gg/JqWeqD9bvQ

Between the Buried and Me is the debut studio album by the American progressive metal band Between the Buried and Me. It was produced by Jamie King and was released on April 30, 2002, through Lifeforce Records. The album contains re-recordings of all the songs that were on the group's 2001 3-track demo: "What We Have Become," "More of Myself to Kill" and "The Use of a Weapon." The album was remixed and remastered in 2020. The songs on the album demonstrate numerous concepts—one of which, the song "Arsonist", was written about their strong feelings against the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas, which has become well known as a controversial religious organization and hate group. ------------------------------------------ Twitter @johnsbernardo / @jarsh.zone Instagram @doesmachines / @jarsh.zone Discord - https://discord.gg/JqWeqD9bvQ