A Different Kind of Pain - Cold

A Different Kind of Pain

Cold

  • Genre: Hard Rock
  • Release Date: 2005-08-29
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 11

  • ℗ 2005 Atlantic Recording Corp.

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Back Home 4:31 USD 1.29
2
Feel It In Your Heart 3:46 USD 1.29
3
Anatomy of a Tidal Wave 4:27 USD 1.29
4
A Different Kind of Pain 5:19 USD 1.29
5
Another Pill 3:45 USD 1.29
6
Happens All the Time 3:28 USD 1.29
7
When Heaven's Not Far Away 3:06 USD 1.29
8
God's Song 3:13 USD 1.29
9
When Angels Fly Away 3:58 USD 1.29
10
Tell Me Why 3:21 USD 1.29
11
Ocean 3:46 USD 1.29
A Different Kind of Pain - Cold
Cover Album A Different Kind of Pain - Cold

Reviews

  • 🕷❄✨
    5
    By Oriaz666
    Cold!!!!Will forever be one of my greatest!!!🕸
  • Cold
    5
    By Tnkerbl
    I really have nothing to say bad about this album it is really good I recommend for you to get it
  • THE ONLY ALBUM…
    5
    By Capt_Jessica
    where all the songs are my favorite. Each song is flipping amazing. I can listen to this album all day and never complain. This is true medicine.
  • COLD is always good BUT...
    4
    By Sharashito San
    Whoever wrote the description for this album is effing clueless. Saying that Scooter became like Staind is stupid. The BAND started to sound like Staind. Scooter ALWAYS had the feeling and lyrical depth from the start. And to say that Limp Bizkit is "Math Metal" is like calling Barrack Obama a Constitutional Conservative Champion. No doubt the quidnunc that composed the description is probably one of Slobby Amaru's brainless groupies. Jacksoffville LAME.
  • HAZMAD
    5
    By Celine72202
    Cold is one of the greatest bands of all time. In my opinion.
  • Fantastic album
    5
    By gopnik
    Fantastic album! Not very often you run into an album where pretty much every song is awesome.
  • Great tunes
    5
    By ninasman
    They keep their intensity and shred another great album. Can't say anything that true fans haven't already said. Time changes music,it changes it's nature. Best advice would be do not mature this sound too quickly. We need this to stay strong!
  • not a good title.
    5
    By 7pinky7
    I think the overall quality is good. However, there are at least 15 out of the 45 totatl bands that are known. Now some are newer like Cage the Elephan and Hollywood undead for example. I will also give you Skillet. They have been around for a long time, but just resently started getting more mainstream attention. But Hinder is very popular in the mainstream music and have been for years and other band have been around for awhile to and have had some hits. Kopek is my favorite band on here and are defenetly rising stars. I don't care if they make it big or not as long as the continue to make great music. I don't think they would mind either if they don't become huge. The play for the love of music and that is why they are so good. There are a lot of crappy band that put out albums after albums just to make money and change their sound to what is popular. A real band doesn't do that. They might change there sould and style a bit but not to just be popular.
  • Colds best cd
    5
    By Jbones777
    I think this is by far cold best cd. i singing fit perfect witht he music . and you really feel pain some of the songs
  • Heart-Rending
    4
    By Brendan Bailey
    Take your heart out of your chest. Place it on a plate. Smash it to pieces and view what's inside. Feel like Scooter Ward. Cold, in "A Different Kind of Pain," tap into every emotion you have ever had and turn it into a soundtrack for your most difficult days. Put aside pretension and allow yourself to be moved by a couple guys pouring every inch of themselves into their instruments. "Happens All The Time" has both the crunch and calm of love and loss, while "A Different Kind of Pain" sets your soul on fire in melodious harmony. "Feel it In Your Heart," despite the perhaps bombastic lyrics, highlights the band's ability to follow Scooter's vocals through an aural black hole of angst. "Tidal Wave," as the title suggests, crashes down in a storm of percussion and a chorus that will haunt you for days after listening. Sure, Cold doesn't sound like they did once on "!3 Ways to Bleed," but change, in this case, results in a fresh approach to anger, sadness, loss, and redemption. Here's hoping Cold's 2010 release shows the same growth.