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・ Audion (software)
・ Audion receiver
・ Audionom
・ AudioNow
・ Audiopathik
・ Audiopax
・ Audiopeach
・ Audiophile
・ Audiophile Records
・ AudioPorn Records
・ Audioprosthology
・ AudioQuest
・ Audioscopiks
・ Audiosim (software synthesizer)
・ Audioslave
Audioslave (album)
・ Audioslave (video album)
・ Audioslave discography
・ Audiosocket
・ Audiosurf
・ Audiosurf 2
・ Audiotistic Music Festival
・ Audiotool
・ Audiotopsy (band)
・ Audiotraffic
・ Audiotransparent
・ Audiotricz
・ AudioTron
・ Audiotrope
・ Audiovent


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Audioslave (album) : ウィキペディア英語版
Audioslave (album)

| Length = 65:26
| Label =
| Producer =
| This album = ''Audioslave''
(2002)
| Next album = ''Out of Exile''
(2005)
| Misc =
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''Audioslave'' is the eponymous debut studio album by the American rock supergroup Audioslave and was released on November 19, 2002 (see 2002 in music). It features the hit singles "Cochise", "Show Me How to Live", "What You Are", "Like a Stone", and "I Am the Highway". The record was certified triple platinum in the US. "Like a Stone" was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance.
==Background==
Audioslave was formed after Zack de la Rocha left Rage Against the Machine and the remaining members were searching for another vocalist. Producer and friend Rick Rubin suggested that they contact Chris Cornell. Rubin played the remaining Rage Against the Machine band members the Soundgarden song "Slaves & Bulldozers" to showcase his ability. Cornell was in the writing process of a second solo album, but decided to shelve that and pursue the opportunity to work with Tom Morello, Tim Commerford and Brad Wilk when they approached him. Morello described Cornell: "He stepped to the microphone and sang the song and I couldn't believe it. It didn't just sound good. It sounded transcendent. And... when there is an irreplaceable chemistry from the first moment, you can't deny it." The quartet wrote 21 songs during 19 days of rehearsal and began working in the studio in late May 2001.〔O'Brien, Clare. "Pushing Forward Back." ''Zero Magazine''. September 7, 2005, Iss. 1.〕
Songs from the album were first heard when thirteen rough rehearsal demo tracks were leaked onto various peer-to-peer filesharing networks on May 16, 2002, six months before the official release of the album, under the name "Civilian" (or "The Civilian Project"). According to guitarist Tom Morello "it was very frustrating, especially with a band like this, there is a certain amount of expectation." He also said that the songs were not in their finished form and that in some cases "they weren't even the same lyrics, guitar solos, performances of any kind."〔 In an earlier, July 2002 interview with Metal Sludge he spoke more explicitly about the incident, blaming "some jackass intern at Bad Animal Studios in Seattle" for stealing the demos and putting them on the Internet without the band's permission.
The band was nearly derailed before the album's release; Cornell was going through alcohol problems and a slot on the Ozzfest tour was canceled. During this time, there was a rumor that Cornell had checked himself into drug rehabilitation. He later confirmed it in an interview with ''Metal Hammer'' that was conducted from a clinic payphone. In a ''San Diego CityBeat'' article, Cornell explained that he went through "a horrible personal crisis" during the making of the first record, staying in rehab for two months and separating from his wife. The problems were ironed out and he has remained sober since this time. The band toured through 2003, before resting in 2004 to record their second album.
This album was released just over ten years after Rage Against the Machine's (Morello, Commerford, and Wilk's former band) debut album was released on November 3, 1992.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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