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・ The Sound of Music
・ The Sound of Music (An Unfinished Symphony in 12 Parts)
・ The Sound of Music (Christine Fan album)
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・ The Sound of Paul Horn
The Sound of Perseverance
・ The Sound of Petula
・ The Sound of Regret
・ The Sound of Revenge
・ The Sound of San Francisco
・ The Sound of Scandinavia
・ The Sound of Settling
・ The Sound of Silence
・ The Sound of Silence (Carmen McRae album)
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The Sound of Perseverance : ウィキペディア英語版
The Sound of Perseverance

''The Sound of Perseverance'' is the seventh and final studio album by American death metal band Death, released on September 15, 1998 by Nuclear Blast.〔 This is the only album to feature guitarist Shannon Hamm, bassist Scott Clendenin and drummer Richard Christy.
== Overview ==
The album, in particular, employs a style more akin to progressive metal than the earliest Death releases, although since ''Human'' and the albums following it, the band had been developing more toward this style. The average song length on this album is around six minutes. Also, it was a breakthrough album for drummer and later radio star Richard Christy, in the tradition of previous drummers like Gene Hoglan and Sean Reinert.
The album features "Voice of the Soul", an instrumental track that contrasts with almost every other work of the band in its inclusion of softer guitars and lack of percussion. In an interview done in March 1999, Chuck Schuldiner stated that Voice of the Soul was actually written during the ''Symbolic'' sessions.〔 Accessed December 7, 2010.〕 Death has produced only two instrumentals (the other being the considerably heavier "Cosmic Sea" from ''Human''). The album also featured a cover of Judas Priest's "Painkiller", which shows Schuldiner attempting a different, high-pitched style of death growl more reminiscent of Rob Halford's original vocals and also singing for the first time with a clean voice through the end of the song. All the solos in the song are rewritten.
Some of the song names and music on ''The Sound of Perseverance'' were originally going to appear on the first Control Denied album, ''The Fragile Art of Existence''. Schuldiner himself denied this in an interview with Metal Maniacs in 1998 by saying that none of his compositions for Control Denied had been used to fill space for a Death album.〔 Accessed February 4, 2012.〕 Schuldiner implied that some Control Denied songs were used for The Sound of Perseverance in an interview with Scream Magazine in October 1999, when he stated that ''The Fragile Art of Existence'' "contains a lot of music I didn't have in mind originally. Most of the material was completed in 1996-97." 〔 Accessed March 5, 2012.〕 Also, Tim Aymar, in December 2010, confirmed that a few of the Control Denied songs had been, in his words, "'Deathized' and recorded on TSOP."〔(''Tim Aymar Speaks Out'' ), Empty Words, accessed December 7, 2010.〕 When Death was signed on to Nuclear Blast, Schuldiner agreed to make one last Death album before moving forward with Control Denied.
"Spirit Crusher" was the single from this album. It featured a music video that was taken from their ''Live in Eindhoven'' performance.

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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