{"product_id":"count_your_blessings_repented","title":"Count Your Blessings - Repented","description":"\u003cp\u003eCount Your Blessings – Repented is a full re-recording of Bring Me The Horizon’s 2006 debut album Count Your Blessings, released on July 10, 2026 to mark the record’s 20th anniversary. Rather than a simple remaster, it is a ground‑up redux: vocalist Oli Sykes and guitarist Lee Malia reh elm the sessions, working with mixer Buster Oldhenholm to recreate the original deathcore tracks with modern production, tighter performances, and the benefit of two decades of experience. Issued on CD, vinyl (including picture‑disc editions), and digital formats, the album retains the original 10-song tracklist—Pray for Plagues, Tell Slater Not to Wash His Dick, For Stevie Wonders Eyes Only, A Lot Like Vegas, Black \u0026amp; Blue, Slow Dance, Liquor \u0026amp; Love Lost, (I Used to Make Out With) Medusa, Fifteen Fathoms, Counting, Off the Heezay—while adding a new closing track, Dehumanized, written and recorded in the classic style to act as a present-day addendum.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMusically, Repented stays firmly rooted in uncompromising mid‑2000s deathcore: blast beats, breakdowns, dissonant riffs, and guttural\/harsh vocals are all preserved, but now presented with far clearer, heavier, and more balanced sound than the original low-budget production allowed. Reviews describe it as a “re-rendering” rather than a revision, noting that the structures and lyrics remain almost entirely intact—including lines that have long been criticized as misogynistic—to preserve the raw, angry headspace of the teenage band, even as the 39‑year‑old Sykes revisits those words with markedly improved technique. Critics generally see the project as a rare example of a re-record done “for the right reasons,” arguing that it rectifies the mix and performance issues that long bothered the band while still honoring the chaotic energy that made Count Your Blessings a cult favorite and a formative document for a generation of deathcore fans; the new track Dehumanized, inspired in part by controversy over Palestinian flags at Reading Festival, underscores how the band now uses this sonic language to engage with contemporary political questions as well.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Record Store","offers":[{"title":"Vinyl \/ Album - Indie Excl. Picture Disc Vinyl","offer_id":53745572086074,"sku":"39226","price":37.99,"currency_code":"CAD","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0784\/2041\/0682\/files\/Screenshot_2026-07-16_at_3.39.41_PM_71590665-d9b0-4cc2-9d7b-9747304025b4.jpeg?v=1784230950","url":"https:\/\/recordstore.ca\/products\/count_your_blessings_repented","provider":"Record Store","version":"1.0","type":"link"}