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Ten Thousand Fists
Users Say
157 ratings
Album Reviews: 15
Album: Ten Thousand Fists
Artist: Disturbed
Release Date: 9/20/2005
Genre: Rock/Pop
Tags: heavy metal, disturbed, down with the sickness

It started in 2000 with "Down with the Sickness." Disturbed's thick, rhythmic take on alt-metal was perfect music for stalking bloody zombies, and vocalist David Draiman's jaw-snapping Pavlovian grunts made the trigger fingers of first-person shooters itch. There were threads of other groups in... [+] Expand

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Ten Thousand Fists by Disturbed!

Recent User Reviews

Keeping the classic Disturbed style with some nice improvements, but most of the songs are very similar if not identical, so in the end the album gets boring.
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posted Oct 26, 2005
Definatly a great album, this is just as good a the sickness and better than belive.
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posted Nov 24, 2006
Like wine, they are getting better with age--and still, oh so hot!
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posted Oct 5, 2006
More moody from their first cd, but still awesome!
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posted Jan 19, 2007
Nothing Better
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posted Sep 24, 2005
dont let the score fool u
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posted Mar 1, 2006
GoOD BuT NOt GrEAT
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posted Sep 22, 2005
Another Masterpiece
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posted Nov 23, 2005
D I S T U R B E D rocks
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posted Sep 23, 2005
This is by far the best of the 3 albums. The lyrics are great and more music should be as good as DISTURBED!
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posted Dec 6, 2005

Critic's Review

3.5 out of 5 stars Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
It started in 2000 with "Down with the Sickness." Disturbed's thick, rhythmic take on alt-metal was perfect music for stalking bloody zombies, and vocalist David Draiman's jaw-snapping Pavlovian grunts made the trigger fingers of first-person shooters itch. There were threads of other groups in the sound -- Pantera's wrenching power, Slipknot, the ill-lighted parlor games of Tool. But Disturbed held their own from the start, so get up, come on get down with the sickness. If 2002's Believe downplayed Draiman's guttural responses a little, that tact's long gone for 2005's Ten Thousand Fists. From Todd McFarlane's evocative wronged misfits artwork -- Suicide Girls stand fists upraised next to ghoulish fiends and disenfranchised truckers -- to the rousing staccato of the title track and the "Sickness" rewrite "Stricken," Disturbed solidify their stance as the black knights of gaming-console rock. Creepy electronics slither behind Dan Donegan's guitar, and he mostly forsakes soloing to concentrate on the visceral groove. When he's not hacking like a chained-up pit bull, Draiman emotes from the valley of reverb (that's next to the valley of death), and his moments of epic roar make the songs' choppier parts more effective. Now, "Overburdened" takes the epic stuff a little too far. Draiman starts off the song in narration, muttering "Fate is so unkind" like a monster who's been given the power to feel. But even in its swirling pretentiousness, you can't deny his intensity. Luckily the majority of Fists sticks to mid-tempo punishers that pound back anger-gritted teeth and no anesthesia. (Remember, Disturbed's tours are underwritten by Jägermeister, the black licorice firewater that punches Saturday night in the face.) "Deify" rails against blind devotion to political leaders and "Sons of Plunder" stalks at a faster, more aggressive faster heart rate, while "Decadence" and "Sacred Lie" drop into the rhythmic grip that by mid- to late album is almost comfortable in its gloomy thump. (Disturbed's ill-advised cover of Genesis' "Land of Confusion"? No comment.) Ten Thousand Fists does start to sound the same after a while. But those bloody zombies aren't going to stop pouring though the doorway, so it's a good thing it has at least 12 burly alt-metal rockers. Fire!
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