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Meshuggah Concert Tickets

Meshuggah, whose name is taken from the Hebrew and Yiddish word for “crazy”, is a five-piece band from Umeå, Sweden, founded in 1987. The band's style is most easily described as extreme/technical metal with some jazz influence. They use extended polymetric passages, polyrhythmic drum patterns, angular, dissonant guitar riffs, and harsh vocals. Check our available Meshuggah concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Meshuggah Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Summary: Heavier than the Colosseum itself. 14 of 15 thought this review was well written Ask any of the bands out there trying to emulate the inimitable elements of Meshuggah's music. They'd be recalling crude conceptualism, fundamentals they'd probably call them: polyrhythm (actually polymetre), the generalist notions of complexity and technicality - yet none of these groups come even close to generating anything Meshuggah have, or seem to be able to summon. Why...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
Summary: A return with nothing ground-breaking for their sound, but a return that reminds you of why their sound is worth returning to. 3 of 3 thought this review was well written In the 4 years that have passed since Meshuggah's sixth album obZen was released in 2008, it seems as though everyone have forgotten what Meshuggah was really about with the rising music scene that was based off the sound of their riffs, "djent"...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
"'Koloss' is the most varied and diverse album that Meshuggah has ever made, and each and every last song would fit on a live set by the band." Beginning slow and ponderous in a fashion similar to "Nothing," and then changing on the next track to a faster piece that's the most furious Meshuggah has been since "Chaosphere," "Do Not Look Down" sets the stage for what Meshuggah has done with "Koloss...
- www.metalunderground.com
Sound: The band has never sounded cleverer, or more bewildering. Is it one huge song? Are there two bars of music alike in whole album? The sheer impact of this style is incredible, but becomes tiring unless you realise what's going on - this is an album designed as one continuous piece of music. That's right. Throughout this piece, there are themes, various segments that are introduced and gradually change throughout the whole album...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: Meshuggah has a very unique and different sound. For you first time listeners, I'll let that sink in. Because wether or not you like meshuggah's style, it is not a question, they have originality. Name one other band on the planet that sounds like meshuggah. You can't. Now be warned, this album is not for those of you without patience...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: It should be left to fans, critics and commentators to decide how the landscape's changed since Meshuggah released "obZen" in 2008, since the band themselves will have little interest. There is undoubtedly a bigger audience for the Swedes right now than there ever has been, thanks in part to a new crop of bands who are expanding on what was for years the band's unique, untouchable guitar style...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: So here we are, Fredrik Thordendal and co. emerge once again with a new album. Meshuggah lovers and haters alike have come to expect certain things from Meshuggah, horrendously catchy drop-Z chugs, awe-inspiring drumming and a total wall of noise sound being just a few of them. While obZen certainly does not lack these characteristics, there is a something a little different here from the Meshuggah norm...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Summary: The gears keep turning in a well oiled machine. Koloss is a strange beast. It comes from Meshuggah, a band that, for as skilled and mind bending as they are, have basically released the same album over and over again since 1995's Destroy Erase Improve, yet it sounds unlike any Meshuggah album I have ever heard...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
While four years can be a long time in the music world, technical metal act Meshuggah picks up exactly where it left off on 2008's obZen with the new Koloss. Or rather, the band has issued an album that's a direct reaction to obZen. Things here are streamlined, less amorphous and intricate. If obZen can be called Meshuggah's ...And Justice For All, then Koloss is the band's Black Album, only really monolithic and not shitty. Of course, certain elements carry over...
- www.punknews.org
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