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Hourglass - Volume II - The Epic Years

486.3M streams

486,314,371

Lamb of God

110.7M streams

110,676,270

Redneck

110.5M streams

110,492,277

Ashes of the Wake (15th Anniversary)

106.8M streams

106,830,772

VII: Sturm und Drang

101.3M streams

101,318,771

Music from the film As the Palaces Bur...

54M streams

53,965,869

Resolution

52.9M streams

52,939,587

Omens

48.2M streams

48,157,641

Sacrament (15th Anniversary Edition)

43M streams

43,022,343

Wrath (Deluxe Edition)

36.4M streams

36,420,622

Biography

"For millions of headbangers, Lamb Of God are simply the most important contemporary metal band in the world," - Guitar World Now, the Grammy-nominated goliath follows 2020's self-titled slab, Lamb of God, with a vicious new testament. Riding high on an insatiable drive, a focused collective camaraderie, and a creative renaissance saluted by the likes of Rolling Stone and NME, Lamb Of God returned to longtime producer Josh Wilbur and carved the gloriously unhinged Omens into sonic stone. Even as D. Randall Blythe (vocals), Mark Morton (lead guitar), Willie Adler (guitar), John Campbell (bass), and Art Cruz (drums) enjoy one another's company and chemistry like never before, Omens is possibly the angriest Lamb Of God album yet. "It's a pissed-off record," Blythe says, with a hint of mischief. "It's a very pissed-off record." He pauses for emphasis. "It is extremely pissed-off." Densely muscular, soaked in unnerving spite, with a pessimistic eye toward inner struggles and global affairs alike, Omens is a furious entry in the Lamb Of God catalog. "The world is crazy and keeps changing. Omens is a reaction to the state of the world around me," Blythe reasons. "The last record was thematically driven; really, this one is just a response to the screwed-up world we live in."