Type O Negative - Discography 1991 - 2007 -flac... ❲No Ads❳
The Drab Four: The Complete Type O Negative Discography (1991–2007)
From their Brooklyn roots to becoming the undisputed icons of gothic metal, Type O Negative
crafted a legacy defined by crushing doom riffs, Beatles-esque melodies, and a pitch-black sense of humor. Led by the late Peter Steele
, the band released seven core studio albums that transformed the landscape of heavy music. The Roadrunner Years (1991–2003)
The majority of the band's work was released under Roadrunner Records, a period often summarized in the exhaustive Complete Roadrunner Collection
I can’t help locate, provide, or assist in obtaining copyrighted music, albums, or torrent/FLAC downloads.
If you’d like, I can instead:
- Summarize Type O Negative’s discography 1991–2007 (albums, release years, notable tracks).
- Provide tracklists for each official album.
- Suggest legal ways to listen (streaming services, purchase options).
- Recommend similar artists or playlists.
Which of those would you prefer?
Type O Negative’s discography from 1991 to 2007 documents the band's evolution from raw, abrasive thrash roots to the pinnacle of "Gothic Doom" metal
. For listeners seeking this collection in high-fidelity FLAC, the following review breaks down the progression of their seven core studio albums. The Early Era: Raw & Confrontational (1991–1992)
Type O Negative's primary discography from 1991 to 2007 consists of seven studio albums, ranging from their raw debut Slow, Deep and Hard to their final swan song Dead Again. Studio Album Report (1991–2007) Release Year Album Title Notable Tracks / Details 1991 Slow, Deep and Hard
"Unsuccessfully Coping with the Natural Beauty of Infidelity". A raw blend of doom metal and hardcore punk. 1992 The Origin of the Feces
A "faux-live" album featuring re-recorded tracks with fake audience noise. Includes the Jimi Hendrix cover "Hey Pete". 1993 Bloody Kisses Type O Negative - Discography 1991 - 2007 -FLAC...
Platinum-certified. Breakthrough hits "Black No. 1" and "Christian Woman". 1996 October Rust
Gold-certified. Known for "Love You to Death" and "My Girlfriend's Girlfriend". 1999 World Coming Down
The band's heaviest and darkest work, featuring "Everything Dies". 2003 Life Is Killing Me
Features a more upbeat, "poppier" sound on tracks like "I Don't Wanna Be Me". 2007 Dead Again
The final studio album before Peter Steele's death in 2010. Features "The Profit of Doom". Major Compilations & Collections
The Least Worst Of (2000): A collection of remixes, B-sides, and rare tracks like "Stay Out of My Dreams". Available as a new vinyl from retailers like CalcuttaRecords. The Drab Four: The Complete Type O Negative
The Best of Type O Negative (2006): A 12-track summary of their career under Roadrunner Records.
The Complete Roadrunner Collection 1991–2003 (2012): A comprehensive 6-CD box set including all studio albums except Dead Again. Audio Fidelity & Purchasing
For listeners seeking high-fidelity formats like FLAC, the band's catalog is widely available in lossless digital formats through Qobuz and high-quality physical pressings on Discogs. Special editions, such as the 30th Anniversary of The Origin of the Feces, often include remastered audio and original censored artwork.
That is a solid find. For a band as atmospheric and "thick" sounding as Type O Negative, FLAC is definitely the way to go—you really want that lossless quality to capture Peter Steele’s low-end vocals and those fuzzy, gothic industrial layers [1, 2].
That specific range (1991–2007) covers their entire studio run, from the raw aggression of Slow, Deep and Hard to the finality of Dead Again [3, 4]. Sources: What is FLAC? The high-res audio format explained Type O Negative - Official Website
4) World Coming Down (1999)
- Context: Darker, more personal and somber; influenced by death, addiction, and loss.
- Sound/production: Heavier, less ironic—markedly bleak tone and shorter, punchier songs but still long durations.
- Notable tracks: “Everyone I Love Is Dead,” “Everything Dies.”
- Themes: Mortality, grief, substance abuse, real-life struggles (notably Peter Steele’s losses).
1996: October Rust (The Sonic Cathedral)
Arguably the album that benefits most from FLAC. Drenched in reverb, acoustic guitars, and harmonic vocals. Which of those would you prefer
- FLAC Highlights: The opening wind storm and chimes of “Bad Ground.” The way Josh Silver’s keyboards breathe in “Love You to Death.” Listen to the decay after the line “I croak”—the room ambience, preserved perfectly.
- The Bass Tone: Pete uses a pick on “Cinnamon Girl” (Neil Young cover). In FLAC, you hear the pick attack and the string sliding over the frets. MP3 turns this into a generic thud.
- Dynamic Tip: Play “Haunted” back-to-back with “In Praise of Bacchus.” The drop in volume on the latter is intentional. FLAC’s dynamic range lets your DAC handle it correctly.
Singles, EPs, covers and notable non-album tracks (high level)
- Covers: “Summer Breeze” (Seals & Crofts) on Bloody Kisses; the band often reinterpreted outside material into their aesthetic.
- Singles with video presence: “Black No.1,” “Christian Woman,” “My Girlfriend’s Girlfriend,” “I Don’t Wanna Be Me.”
- Live and compilation releases during/after this period collect demos, rarities, and live takes; these provide alternate mixes and previously unreleased material that fans often seek for completeness.





















