There Is A Hell, Believe Me I've Seen It. There Is A Heaven, Let's Keep It A Secret
- Label
-
Visible Noise
- Running length
- 3 tracks
- Running time
- 14:15
Tags
Tracklist
| Track | Duration | Listeners | ||||
| 1 | Anthem | 4:48 | 115,293 | |||
| 2 | It Never Ends | 4:33 | 162,489 | |||
| 3 | Fuck | 4:54 | 109,506 |
About this album
There Is a Hell, Believe Me, I’ve Seen It. There Is a Heaven, Let’s Keep It a Secret. is the third studio album album by British metalcore band Bring Me the Horizon. It was released on 4 October 2010 throughout the majority of Europe through Visible Noise whilst being released in the United States the following day through Epitaph Records. Recorded between March and June 2010 in IF Studios in Frölunda, Gothenburg Sweden and Sunset Lodge Studios in Los Angeles, California, the album was produced by Fredrik Nordström and Henrick Udd and features guest vocals from Canadian recording artist Lights
…
, Josh Franceschi from British rock band You Me at Six and Josh Scogin from American mathcore band The Chariot.
Musically, the album expands itself from the band’s previous material, drawing from the metalcore and post-hardcore genres whilst also incorporating a wide variety of experimentation, symphonic metal and electronic influences, clean vocals and choir vocal samples. Lyrically, the band has described Oliver Sykes’ writing to be “personal” and “darker and moodier than music on the previous albums”. The album’s title is taken from the opening track, which is repeated multiple times throughout its verses and choruses.
There Is a Hell received critical acclaim from music critics, who praised the album’s musicianship, lyrical content, experimentation and maturity in comparison with the band’s previous material, with several publications placing it on their year-end lists.
Musically, the album expands itself from the band’s previous material, drawing from the metalcore and post-hardcore genres whilst also incorporating a wide variety of experimentation, symphonic metal and electronic influences, clean vocals and choir vocal samples. Lyrically, the band has described Oliver Sykes’ writing to be “personal” and “darker and moodier than music on the previous albums”. The album’s title is taken from the opening track, which is repeated multiple times throughout its verses and choruses.
There Is a Hell received critical acclaim from music critics, who praised the album’s musicianship, lyrical content, experimentation and maturity in comparison with the band’s previous material, with several publications placing it on their year-end lists.
Explore more
Listen to, buy or share
Buy
-
4,430,334
scrobbles
-
187,200 listeners
-
koetee is listening to Bring Me the Horizon – Visions
Scrobbling from
foobar2000
Bring Me the Horizon







