Pantera was well-prepared when it went into the studio to make this album, and the result is a pummeling, punishing journey of high-volume psychosis. While impressive in its...
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Thankfully, Pantera has stopped attempting to outdo each successive album in terms of start-to-finish intensity, but that doesn't mean they don't try in spots. The Great...
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Official Live: 101 Proof hits most, but not quite all, of the high points of Pantera's career ("Psycho Holiday" and "Mouth for War" are two notable omissions), drawing most...
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It's hard, it's wild, it's loaded with personality. Pantera, on its first major label record, sounded like no other band at the time. Don't be shocked if you find yourself...
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Pantera's breakthrough album, Cowboys From Hell, is largely driven by the band's powerful rhythm section and guitarist Diamond Darrell (as he was then known)'s unbelievably...
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Although loaded with hard rhythms and manic guitar work that pleased its many fans, the songwriting isn't as strong as it is on either Cowboys From Hell or Vulgar Display Of...
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This album is probably Pantera's most accessible to the non-metal ear, while keeping the requisite heaviness. With songs as catchy as they are powerful, Vulgar Display may...
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Where The Great Southern Trendkill experimented with slower, moodier pieces, Reinventing the Steel finds Pantera sticking to the pulverizing basics of their sound, with the...
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Where The Great Southern Trendkill experimented with slower, moodier pieces, Reinventing the Steel finds Pantera sticking to the pulverizing basics of their sound, with the...
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"Far Beyond the Great Southern Cowboys' Vulgar Hits!," the subtitle to Pantera's best-of reads. Combining the titles of the band's output since 1990 -- and discounting the...
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