Cornered, aufgefuttert of pizza and beer, the clearance: "Euphoria Morning", should read the publication's own ideas. Clearance: and how.
Only supported by a handful of experienced technician, Cornell braces here a work in light levels, devoted to all-time highs as "Paranoid" by Black Sabbath can measure quite:
Sets the disc with "Can not Change Me" and "Flutter Girl" still rather conventional-average los, follows with "Preaching The End Of The World" the same template: a hundredweight heavy text, restrained orchestrated, vocally presented intimst; Cornell, fragile as porcelain. The Quest for Peace; no hope of a happy ending. "Follow My Way" in his psychotic extravagance gorgeous "inclined" while "When I'm Down" the unsurpassed mastery of this exceptional artist revealed: The boxes vibrate literally when Cornell sings: "so far awayyyy" - so rock song must be! No question of range, no, rather the intensity. Magnetically like nobody else (possibly Robert Plant in heydays) without comparison. This is followed by additional beads, no filler. Each song is a statement that needs to fear no comparison with greatness - especially project "Wave Goodbye", "Disappearing One", "Pillow Of Your Bones Of Your" and "Steel Rain" shows.
The only - albeit minor - criticism: it can be found virtually no guitar solos on the record (such as a total of the guitar parts more "casual" have failed, Cornell's voice just dominates everything).
Overall, therefore, a strong solo debut of the currently unrivaled best rock singer. A must for the discerning rock friend.