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| | Soulfly download mp3 | |  | 
| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: 3 format: mp3 release: 2002 bitrate: 192 length: 78:52 min
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Tracks of 3:
Four Elements.mp3
Downstroy.mp3
Soulfly III.mp3
Seek 'N' Strike.mp3
Enterfaith.mp3
One.mp3
L.O.T.M..mp3
Brasil.mp3
Tree Of Pain.mp3
Sangue De Bairro.mp3
Zumbi.mp3
Soulfire (Remix of Fire).mp3
Soulfly (Universal Srpirit Mix).mp3
Terrorist.mp3
Tribe (Live).mp3
One Nation.mp3
Call To Arms.mp3
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| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Soulfly format: mp3 release: 1998 bitrate: 192 length: 73:22 min
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Tracks of Soulfly:
Eye For An Eye.mp3
No Hope = No Fear.mp3
Bleed.mp3
Tribe.mp3
Bumba.mp3
First Commandment.mp3
Bumbklaat.mp3
Soulfly.mp3
Umbabarauma.mp3
Quicombo.mp3
Fire.mp3
The Song Remains Insane.mp3
No.mp3
Prejudice.mp3
Karmageddon.mp3
Cangaceiro.mp3
Ain't No Feeble Bastard.mp3
The Possibility Of Life's Destruction.mp3
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| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Soulfly (Bonus CD) format: mp3 release: 1998 bitrate: 192 length: 52:37 min
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Tracks of Soulfly (Bonus CD):
Tribe (Fuck Shit Up Mix).mp3
Quilombo (Extreme Ragga Dub Mix).mp3
Umbabarauma (World Cup Mix).mp3
No Hope = No Fear (live).mp3
Bleed (live).mp3
Bumba (live).mp3
Quilombo (live).mp3
The Song Remains Insane (live).mp3
Eye For An Eye (live At Indigo Ranch).mp3
Tribe (Tribal Terrorism Mix).mp3
Umbabarauma (Brasil '70 Mix).mp3
Quilombo (Zumbi Dub Mix).mp3
Soulfly (Eternal Spirit Mix).mp3
| | | | 
| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Primitive format: mp3 release: 2000 bitrate: 192 length: 73:55 min
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Tracks of Primitive:
Back To The Primitive.mp3
Pain (Feat. Chino Moreno & Grady Avenell).mp3
Bring It.mp3
Jumpdafuckup (Feat. Corey Taylor #8).mp3
Mulambo (Feat. The Mulambo Tribe).mp3
Son Song (Feat. Sean Lennon).mp3
Boom.mp3
Terrorist (Feat. Tom Araya).mp3
The Prophet.mp3
Soulfly II.mp3
In Memory Of... (Feat. Cutthroat Logic).mp3
Fly High (Feat. Asha Rabouin).mp3
Eye For An Eye (Live).mp3
Tribe (Live).mp3
Soulfire.mp3
Soulfly (Universal Spirit Mix).mp3
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| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Prophecy format: mp3 release: 2004 bitrate: 192 length: 55:10 min
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Tracks of Prophecy:
Prophecy.mp3
Living Sacrifice.mp3
Execution Style.mp3
Defeat U.mp3
Mars.mp3
I Believe.mp3
Moses.mp3
Born Again Anarchist.mp3
Porrada.mp3
In The Meantime.mp3
Soulfly IV.mp3
Wings.mp3
| | | | 
| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Dynamo Soulmasters format: mp3 release: 1998 bitrate: 224 length: 73:10 min
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Tracks of Dynamo Soulmasters:
Intro.mp3
Eye For An Eye.mp3
No Hope Is Fear.mp3
Spit.mp3
Bleed.mp3
Beneath The Remains Dead Emryonic Cells.mp3
Tribe.mp3
Bumba.mp3
Quilombo Exodus (with Benji Of Dub War).mp3
Prejudice (with Benji Of Dub War).mp3
Roots Bloody Roots.mp3
Attitude.mp3
The Song Remains Insane.mp3
The First Commandment (with Chino Of The Deftones).mp3
Headupthe (Deftones Livebonus Track).mp3
Enginethe (Deftones Livebonus Track).mp3
Cangaceiro (Unreleased Bonus Track).mp3
Ain't No Feeble Basterd (Unreleased Bonus Track).mp3
The Possibility Of Lifes Destruction (Unreleased Bonus Track).mp3
| | | | 
| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Dark Ages format: mp3 release: 2005 bitrate: 192 length: 66:27 min
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Tracks of Dark Ages:
The Dark Ages.mp3
Babylon.mp3
I And I.mp3
Carved Inside.mp3
Arise Again.mp3
Molotov.mp3
Frontlines.mp3
Innerspirit.mp3
Corrosion Creeps.mp3
Riotstarter.mp3
Bleak.mp3
(The) March.mp3
Fuel The Hate.mp3
Staystrong.mp3
Soulfly V.mp3
| | | | 
| | Soulfly [ mp3 ]album: Strangeland format: mp3 release: 1998 year bitrate: 224 length: 72:50 min
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Tracks of Strangeland:
Inconclusion.mp3
Breathe.mp3
A Secret Place.mp3
Where You Come From.mp3
P & V.mp3
Absent.mp3
Street Justice.mp3
Not Living.mp3
In League.mp3
Sweet Tooth.mp3
Eye For An Eye.mp3
Serpent Boy (Radio Edit).mp3
Fuck Off.mp3
Awake.mp3
Marmalade.mp3
I'm The Man.mp3
Captain Howdy.mp3
Heroes Are Hard To Find.mp3
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News from our arhive: Zakk Wylde.Guitarist avoids trying too hard on new LP |
Even when he's not in the studio or on the road, it's hard for Black Label Society maestro Zakk Wylde to get any rest. His home, located about an hour outside of Los Angeles, is a sanctuary of sorts for wayward rockers and friends, who keep him up all night partying. His most current tenant is Phil, a noisy, obnoxious friend from New Jersey who keeps interrupting our phone interview by shouting homophobic comments.
When it becomes impossible to finish a thought, Wylde wanders outdoors so he can properly discuss his new album, Mafia. But the peace only lasts a couple of minutes. While the guitar player and singer talks about spreading the gospel of Black Label Society, the connection is pierced by what sounds like the feral roar of a chainsaw; it's actually Wylde's 11-year-old son, Jesse, baiting his dad by riding a mini motorcycle in circles around him. "He might as well have a chainsaw," Wylde growled.
Jesse isn't the only one who regularly yanks his dad's lumberjack beard. There's his co-manager and wife, Barbaranne, whom Wylde affectionately calls "My Sharon," and their other son, Hendrix, who just entered his terrible twos. Rock stars don't always make the best or most enthused parents, but for Wylde, music and family have always been inextricably intertwined. And his extended family members have been as important as his blood relatives. When Wylde was 19 years old, he was adopted by Ozzy Osbourne and his band to play on 1989's No Rest for the Wicked. For the next four years, Wylde cut his teeth touring the world with Ozzy, and performed on 1991's No More Tears and 1995's Ozzmosis before setting sail on his own the next year with his first solo album, Book of Shadows. He formed Black Label Society in 1999; six years and five albums later, what started as a side project has turned into a new musical family and a formidable rock force. With the release of the galvanic Mafia, Wylde seems on the verge of breaking Black Label Society beyond the fringes of Ozzfest and into the heavy-metal mainstream.
The album is a showcase of metallic energy that combines the stomp of Pantera, the sluggish chug and guitar squeals of Alice in Chains and the six-string virtuosity of Eddie Van Halen. And to mix things up, there's a pair of piano-fueled ballads, which demonstrate Wylde's flexibility and offer a hint of vulnerability. Mafia is easily Black Label's most mature and fully realized disc to date, one that sounds like it was carefully written and painstakingly finessed.
"To us, it's just another Black Label Society record," Wylde dismissively said. "That's how it is every time. We go in there with nothing, then we kick it around, and within an hour we have a couple songs. That's the way it should be. I think if you really try to figure out what the f--- you're doing and image yourself, then you just end up trying too hard and it doesn't sound real."
Whatever they're doing, Black Label Society are on the right track. Last week, "Suicide Messiah," the first single from the album, was the #1 most-added song at mainstream and active rock radio, which should help build buzz and anticipation for the LP's March 8 release. The song is a crunchy, pounding slugfest with shuddering vocals that sound like a cross between Ozzy and Axl Rose. But while the sound is basically familiar, the subject matter is new for Wylde.
"It's my take on power trips and the way people follow blindly, whether it's Jesus or George Bush or one of those freaks overseas that we're fighting a war against," he explained. "People always need something to put their faith in and they choose these power-crazy mother----ers in the name of religion." For Wylde, this is an epiphany. That he's incorporated the idea into lyrics for his new album is even more revelatory. After all, here's a wild-eyed guy whose drinking exploits are as legendary as his outstanding guitar playing — a dude who has crashed cars into trees for kicks.
"In the world we live in these days, how can you not touch on politics?" he said. "But that doesn't mean I don't still like to have a good time and do crazy sh--. If there isn't something crazy that goes on in the span of the day then something's not right."
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