Sevas Tra
Sevas Tra is the first album by the heavy metal band Otep, released in 2002. The album name, when read backwards, reads as "art saves".[1] It debuted at number 145 on the Billboard 200.[2]
Critical reception
Professional ratings |
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Review scores |
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Source | Rating |
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Allmusic | [1] |
The album received positive reviews. Allmusic gave the album a 4 out of 5 stars rating writing "Sevas Tra is a record that raises the high watermark for goth metal."[1] CMJ gave the album an extremely positive review writing "If you're a guy, do yourself a favor. Don't be a male chauvinistic fuck face that thinks a woman can't tear it up just as good as a man can. Otep (the person) has a voice so deep and foreboding that it would scare a wolf away from her cubs, not to mention that her death metal growl has more balls than 95 percent of the nū metal crybabies wasting air space on commercial rock radio."[3]
Music and lyrics
The album is a nu metal[4] album that features strong elements of death metal.[5][3] Also, it features elements of groove metal, funk metal, alternative metal, rap metal, grindcore and hip-hop.[5][1] The album's song "Jonestown Tea" features elements of spoken word.[5] The vocals consist of growling,[1][3] screaming[1][3] and rapping.[6] The growling on the album is one example of the album's elements of grindcore and death metal.[5][3] Also, the album has guitar riffs heard in the death metal genre. The album has been compared to Cannibal Corpse, Metallica, Skinlab and Slipknot.[4][3] Allmusic described the album as "heavier than Slipknot".[1] The album's lyrical topics include organized religion and abuse.[5] The band's vocalist Otep Shamaya said that the album Sevas Tra "is a story about life's struggles and what you do to overcome them, or what you do to be swallowed by them."[7] The album's song "Jonestown Tea" is about child sexual abuse and is also believed to be about Otep Shamaya being sexually abused by her father.[7][8] The song was used by a teenager who, along with her sister, was sexually abused by their father, to inform her mother about her father's sexual abuse.[8] Otep Shamaya spoke about the song "Jonestown Tea" saying
“ |
I wanted to do something dramatic for the record. At one of our rehearsals, management was there and some people from a label scouting us, and we just started (to improvise) ... By the end of the song, which was about 13 or 14 minutes later, people's jaws were on the floor. I'd kind of gone off into this other place and didn't really realize what had occurred. Something remarkable had taken place. Once we'd gone through that and everyone was like, 'Where did that come from? I decided that this was something important that I wanted to express and communicate on the record.[8] |
” |
Otep Shamaya called organized religion "a lie".[5] Many people have mistaken the song "Menocide" to be against men. Otep Shamaya said that it isn't hateful towards men and that it goes against women abuse, including violence against women.[9]
Track listing
All songs written and composed by M. Bistany, J. McGuire, R. Patterson and Otep Shamaya, except where noted.
1. |
"Tortured" | |
1:39 |
2. |
"Blood Pigs" | |
4:03 |
3. |
"T.R.I.C." (reworked from the Jihad version of "T.R.I.C.") | Bistany, W. Marsh, McGuire, Patterson, Shamaya |
3:05 |
4. |
"My Confession" | |
5:31 |
5. |
"Sacrilege" (reworked from the Jihad version of "The Lord Is My Weapon") | |
4:09 |
6. |
"Battle Ready" | |
4:21 |
7. |
"Emtee" | |
3:58 |
8. |
"Possession" (reworked from the Jihad version of "Possession") | Bistany, Marsh, McGuire, Patterson, Shamaya |
4:54 |
9. |
"Thots" | |
4:09 |
10. |
"Fillthee" (reworked from the Jihad version of "Fillthee") | D. Aguilera, Bistany, Marsh, McGuire, Patterson, Shamaya |
3:36 |
11. |
"Menocide" | |
4:51 |
12. |
"Jonestown Tea" | |
9:47 |
13. |
"Brother" (Hidden Track) | |
7:03 |
Personnel
- Main personnel
- Additional personnel
- Producer: Terry Date
- Engineers: Terry Date, Martin Feveyear
- Assistant engineers: Dave Fisher, Anthony Kilhoffer, Floyd Reitsman
- Mixing: Terry Date
- Mastering: Ted Jensen
- Digital editing: Martin Feveyear
- A&R: Ron Laffitte
- Art direction: P.R. Brown, Wendy Dougan
- Jacket design: P.R. Brown
- Booklet design: Wendy Dougan
- Photography: P.R. Brown
Charts
Album - Billboard (North America)
Year |
Chart |
Position |
2002 |
UK |
86[10] |
The Billboard 200 |
145 |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Sevas Tra - Otep". Allmusic.
- ↑ "Otep – Chart History: Billboard 200". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved February 7, 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "LOUD ROCK" 71 (766). CMJ New Music Report. June 10, 2002: 19. ISSN 0890-0795.
- 1 2 "OTEP" (102). CMJ New Music Monthly. 2002: 19. ISSN 1074-6978.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kaufman, Gil (August 16, 2002). "Otep Challenges Corey Taylor, Jonathan Davis To Poetry Slam". MTV.
- ↑ Niccum, Jon (August 16, 2002). "Otep adjusts to being sole female artist on Ozzfest". Lawrence.com.
- 1 2 "Jonestown Tea by Otep". Songfacts.
- 1 2 3 "Florida Teenager Uses OTEP Song To Inform Mother Of Sexual Abuse At Hands Of Father". Blabbermouth. January 15, 2006.
- ↑ Harrell, Jeff (April 4, 2013). "From Otep, with rage". Southern Bend Tribune.
- ↑ Zywietz, Tobias. "Chart Log UK: The O - Ozric Tentacles". zobbel.de. Tobias Zywietz. Retrieved July 7, 2009.
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- "Evil" J. McGuire
- Rob Patterson
- Mark "Moke" Bistany
- Dave Aguilera
- Matt "Spooky" Damon
- Tarver Marsh
- Scott Coogan
- Lee Rios
- David Lopez
- Scotty CH
- Doug Pellerin
- Karma Singh Cheema
- Aaron Nordstrom
- Brian Wolff
- David Gentry
- Steven Barbola
| | Studio albums | |
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| Live albums | |
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| EPs | |
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| Singles |
- "T.R.I.C."
- "Blood Pigs"
- "Possession"
- "Warhead"
- "Buried Alive"
- "Ghostflowers"
- "March of the Martyrs"
- "Breed"
- "Perfectly Flawed"
- "Confrontation"
- "Crooked Spoons"
- "Special Pets"
- "Necessary Accessories"
- "Smash the Control Machine"
- "Rise, Rebel, Resist"
- "Run for Cover"
- "Fists Fall"
- "Not to Touch the Earth"
- "Rise, Rebel, Resist" (live)
- "Apex Predator"
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