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Heavy Temple - Garden of Heathens

Heavy Temple - Garden of Heathens (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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Darkthrone - It Beckons Us All.......

Darkthrone - It Beckons Us All....... (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
MMXX - Sacred Cargo

MMXX - Sacred Cargo (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
MMXX - The Next Wave

MMXX - The Next Wave (2023)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Ferum - Asunder / Erode

Ferum - Asunder / Erode (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Polkadot Cadaver - Echoes Across the Hellscape

Polkadot Cadaver - Echoes Across the Hellscape (2023)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Love Is Noise - Euphoria, Where Were You?

Love Is Noise - Euphoria, Where Were You? (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Puppy - Pure Evil

Puppy - Pure Evil (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Fire From the Gods - Soul Revolution

Fire From the Gods - Soul Revolution (2022)

Added: April 22, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Fire From the Gods - American Sun (Reimagined)

Fire From the Gods - American Sun (Reimagined) (2021)

Added: April 22, 2024
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Accept - Humanoid

Accept - Humanoid (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
Leaves' Eyes - Myths of Fate

Leaves' Eyes - Myths of Fate (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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Leaves' Eyes - Black Butterfly

Leaves' Eyes - Black Butterfly (2019)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Sin Starlett - Solid Source of Steel

Sin Starlett - Solid Source of Steel (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Sin Starlett - Digital Overload

Sin Starlett - Digital Overload (2016)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Darkthrone - Thulcandra

Darkthrone - Thulcandra (2023)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Deteriorot - The Rebirth

Deteriorot - The Rebirth (2023)

Added: April 23, 2024
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0.0
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Catalyst - A Different Painting for a New World

Catalyst - A Different Painting for a New World (2022)

Added: April 23, 2024
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Catalyst - The Great Purpose of the Lords

Catalyst - The Great Purpose of the Lords (2019)

Added: April 23, 2024
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Catalyst - Dawn of a Dreadful Fate

Catalyst - Dawn of a Dreadful Fate (2016)

Added: April 23, 2024
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Polkadot Cadaver - Echoes Across the Hellscape

Polkadot Cadaver - Echoes Across the Hellscape (2023)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Sum of R - Lahbryce

Sum of R - Lahbryce (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Sum of R - Lights on Water

Sum of R - Lights on Water (2013)

Added: April 28, 2024
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Inter Arma - New Heaven

Inter Arma - New Heaven (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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Dvne - Voidkind

Dvne - Voidkind (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Leaves' Eyes - Black Butterfly

Leaves' Eyes - Black Butterfly (2019)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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Astral Spectre - Phantom Nightmare

Astral Spectre - Phantom Nightmare (2022)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Darkthrone - It Beckons Us All.......

Darkthrone - It Beckons Us All....... (2024)

Added: April 28, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Antichrist Siege Machine - Vengeance of Eternal Fire

Antichrist Siege Machine - Vengeance of Eternal Fire (2024)

Added: April 25, 2024
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 1
Site Rating
4.5
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4.5
Aristarchos - Martyr of Star and Fire

Aristarchos - Martyr of Star and Fire (2024)

Added: April 25, 2024
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0.0
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Vulture (GER) - Sentinels

Vulture (GER) - Sentinels (2024)

Added: April 23, 2024
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Extinction A.D. - Culture of Violence

Extinction A.D. - Culture of Violence (2022)

Added: April 23, 2024
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Extinction A.D. - Ruthless Intent

Extinction A.D. - Ruthless Intent (2024)

Added: April 23, 2024
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0.0
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Molten - Dystopian Syndrome

Molten - Dystopian Syndrome (2021)

Added: April 23, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Species - To Find Deliverance

Species - To Find Deliverance (2022)

Added: April 18, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Ghost Inside, The - Searching for Solace

Ghost Inside, The - Searching for Solace (2024)

Added: April 23, 2024
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
Clan Rating
4.5
Ghost Inside, The - Rise From the Ashes: Live at the Shrine

Ghost Inside, The - Rise From the Ashes: Live at the Shrine (2021)

Added: April 23, 2024
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
Clan Rating
4.5
Crush Your Soul - Crush Your Soul

Crush Your Soul - Crush Your Soul (2024)

Added: April 23, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Ballista - Ballista Territory

Ballista - Ballista Territory (2022)

Added: April 23, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Ballista - Trans Day of Violence

Ballista - Trans Day of Violence (2023)

Added: April 23, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Neurotech - Memory Eternal

Neurotech - Memory Eternal (2024)

Added: April 18, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Northlane - Triple J Live at the Wireless

Northlane - Triple J Live at the Wireless (2023)

Added: April 14, 2024
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
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4.5
Celldweller - Satellites (Remixed)

Celldweller - Satellites (Remixed) (2023)

Added: April 11, 2024
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
Clan Rating
4.5
Shum - Pulzáló dobok tisztítják meg az eget

Shum - Pulzáló dobok tisztítják meg az eget (2024)

Added: April 07, 2024
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0.0
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0.0
Shum - Nullagon

Shum - Nullagon (2022)

Added: April 07, 2024
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0.0
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Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 143

Releases: 6787

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 57

Releases: 2409

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 144

Releases: 8778

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 184

Releases: 10716

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 118

Releases: 5360

The North
The North

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The Pit
The Pit

Members: 164

Releases: 5057

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 39

Releases: 3869

The Sphere
The Sphere

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Releases: 987

Vengeance of Eternal Fire

Antichrist Siege Machine are relative newcomers to the war metal scene, their debut EP hitting the stands in 2017, but they have taken the genre by the scruff of the neck and laid down some pretty brutal stuff in the seven years since. With latest album, Vengeance of Eternal Fire, ASM have really hit their groove with a release that delivers an all-out aural battery without the muddy production values that robbed so many of their predecessor's releases of any clarity. Yes, I know that muddy, chaotic sound was part of the appeal of early war metal releases from the Blasphemies of this world and I love that archetypal sound too, but here, thirty-five years on from those earliest canoniacal war metal classics, the genre has moved on from that and the best modern war metal acts don't need to hide behind poor production because they have the chops to produce brutal and blasphemous sounds whilst allowing the listener to actually hear everything they are doing.

Of course the basis of war metal is an unholy alliance of death and black metal, with varying proportions of each within the mix. ASM tend towards the more death metal end of the war metal spectrum, dropping occasionally into quite "groovy" slower death metal riffing, just enough to break things up and provide a little variety, but not so much that it distracts from the overarching blitzkrieg that comprises the vast majority of Vengeance of Eternal Fire and shouldn't be seen as any kind of treasonous act against war metal orthodoxy. The drums sit fairly prominently in the mix, so the blastbeats are given plenty of focus, almost as much as the blistering riffs. Interestingly drummer Scott "S.B." Bartley is also the vocalist, so it must be quite a feat when playing live for him to sing whilst launching salvo after salvo of blastbeats. His vocals actually seem to sit lower in the mix than his drumming, thus giving them a distant, buried feel, despite their bellicose viciousness. The high production values allow the listener to distinguish the riffs far easier than on old-school war metal releases and to appreciate the finer details which may have been lost in the past.

I must say, as much as I love OSWM, I do like the fact that a band like ASM employ a cleaner production style, which does make appreciation of the nuances of war metal much easier - and I say this with no ironic intent because it is obvious that, despite the inherent (almost) continuous blasting and breakneck riffing, that these guys really have great command of their instruments and their overall sound is tight, aggressive and technically solid. At the end of the day, they write killer riffs, have a powerful delivery and are extremely capable of capturing the witheringly blasphemous intent of true war metal. For me this is the band's best release to date and call me heretic if you must, but I think this is capable of standing against the very best that war metal has to offer. To (mis)quote the intro to the Fallout 4 video game "war metal... war metal never changes". Except when it does!

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Sonny Sonny / April 28, 2024 04:22 PM
Imperial Doom

I was lucky enough to come across Florida death metallers Monstrosity very early on in their recording career with their 1992 debut album "Imperial Doom" making a significant impact on me during the early 1990's. I believe I discovered them through the inclusion of their video clip for "Final Cremation" on the Nuclear Blast video compilation "Death... Is Just the Beginning" & was impressed enough to want to chase down their full-length as soon as it was released. "Imperial Doom" would go on to become quite influential on me & my own band Neuropath & I've subsequently followed Monstrosity through the rest of their career. I've always thought of them as one of the leaders of the second tier in the death metal hierarchy to be honest with "Imperial Doom" being one of their stronger releases. Let's take a deeper look at the album & what it brought to the table.

"Imperial Doom" showcases the maturity of the early 1990's death metal scene very well with new bands now being influenced by genuine death metal releases rather than classic 80's thrash records. It offers quite a sophisticated sound for such a young band but doesn't try to reinvent the wheel, instead making a confident play at existing ideas & concepts. The Dan Seagrave cover art is attractive enough to draw your interest (although I'd argue that its pinkish tones don't sit amongst his finest work) while the Morrisound Studios production job of Jim Morris presents the band in a highly professional packaging. One thing you'll pick up upon very early on in is that Monstrosity were a serious metal band too. They all clearly knew their way around their chosen instruments & obviously weren't looking to become the next flash in the pan. On the evidence here, they weren't likely to become that either as "Imperial Doom" is a classy affair that's very much a celebration of the death metal genre made by death metal fanatics specifically for a death metal fanbase so I think it's fair to say that a record like this one was always gonna appeal to me personally. I guess I can simply relate to Monstrosity on a deeper level because they so clearly share my early influences & grew up listening to the same records as I did with Morbid Angel's "Altars of Madness", Malevolent Creation's "The Ten Commandments" & the Cannibal Corpse's "Eaten Back To Life" all being clear sources of inspiration.

"Imperial Doom" is a conventional death metal record that presents the listener with everything they'd normally expect from a Florida release. The drumming of Lee Harrison (Hellwitch/Malevolent Creation/Terrorizer) is capable without ever feeling clinical. His blast-beat techniques were very clearly influenced by Morbid Angel's Pete Sandoval although he doesn't over-use them, instead preferring to draw upon them to in order to add impact at key moments which works really well. The basslines of Mark Van Erp (Cynic/Malevolent Creation/Solstice) are easily identifiable in the mix & showcase a level of musicality that's not all that common in this style of music while the riffs & solos of guitarists Jon Rubin (Malevolent Creation) & Jason Gobel (Cynic/Gordian Knot/Portal) all exude a level of sophistication & understanding that's quite surprising for a debut release of the time. But I'm sure it'll come as no surprise that it's current Cannibal Corpse vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher (Corpsegrinder/Paths of Possession/Serpentine Dominion) that steals the show with his ultra-masculine delivery being very much the epitome of the death metal front man. In fact, I'd suggest that George comes off as being a little less one-dimensional here with his stock tone being a touch less blunt & bludgeoning as well as slightly more deathly. He tosses in his signature higher pitched screams at times & they generally work very well too so I'd suggest that he really kinda drives Monstrosity through their first studio outing with a no-fuss attitude that simply gets it done in an efficient & highly presentable fashion.

The nine-song tracklisting is completely without blemish, kicking off with one of the stronger & more brutal inclusions in the impressive title track. It's closely followed by possibly the weakest number on the album in "Definitive Inquisition" but it's not a bad track as such & things pick up significantly from there. The other highlights are "Ceremonial Void" (which featured on Nuclear Blast's "Death ... Is Just the Beginning II" compilation CD at around this time) & the more controlled & atmospheric closer "Darkest Dream" which is my personal favourite but is strangely overlooked by most fans, perhaps because it's the slowest inclusion on the album. The rest of the songs are all very solid examples of early 90's Florida death metal that can hold their own against all but the most elite artists in the genre but I think that "Imperial Doom" might have needed a couple more genuine classics in order to have me reaching for my more premium ratings. There's no doubt that it was a very solid effort for a debut record though & I can't see too many Cannibal Corpse, Malevolent Creation or Sinister fans not lapping it up. Monstrosity's next couple of albums were also excellent & the trio of releases combine to represent Monstrosity's peak period. While I may see "Imperial Doom" may be the weaker of the three after this revisit, it's only by a small margin with 1996's "Millennium" perhaps being my preferred Monstrosity album these days.


P.S. This revisit has left me wondering whether George might have copped the odd light-hearted jab from his Cannibal Corpse band mates once he joined the band because there are many clear references to "Eaten Back To Life" to be found on "Imperial Doom" with a couple bordering on plagiarism. Admittedly, "Imperial Doom" is a much stronger record though.

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Daniel Daniel / April 27, 2024 08:35 PM
City of Evil

I'm glad I'm finally on this Avenged Sevenfold kick.  I've put them off for years out of lack of interest for metalcore and alternative metal.  I was extremely eager to see where the band's mutation would take them, putting their crappy debut on exactly the same level (and directly above on my list of all albums I've heard ranked from best to worst) as The Unspoken King by Cryptopsy, and having been fairly satisfied with the increase in melodic and emotional focus on the second.  But now comes the monster of metal: City of Evil, one of the most controversially diverse albums in both genre-bending and online ratings.

The album kicks off with their iconic song, Beast and the Harlot.  I heard this song a couple times years ago out of curiosity, but I wasn't inspired to go into the whole album yet despite liking it.  But I had VERY little recollection of it, so the Judas Priest shift into thrashy power metal territory took me a little by surprise.  One guy on RYM said it sounds like something you'd hear from the Sonic 2 soundtrack.  Now I've played enough Sonic games to know what that means (not Sonic 2, though), but this is NOT Crush 40 here.  I'd rather sing along with "Her plagues will come all at once as her mourners watch her burn" than "I can feel your every rage, step aside I'll turn the page."  The difference here is THIS SONG IS NOT THROWN TOGETHER.  Although, the shift between thrashy metal and Helloween melodies feels a little out of place sometimes, despite being a lot of fun.

That was just for the first song.  Next is Burn It Down, which is more F-Zero-rooted than Sonic-rooted, and the thrash factor is pretty high.  You can tell these guys are Metallica fans, but it feels more like influence than straight out copying.  The melodic factor works beautifully with the singer's melodic vocals despite the high thrash factor.  It looks like they finally found the balance between melody and energy that they struggled with on the debut and improved on with Waking the Fallen.

There's a metalcore drum kick that starts Blinded in Chains.  Like a few songs from WtF (oh), it combines elements of melodic metalcore with power metal, but this was easily the best metalcore effort I had heard.  There's obvious vocal overlapping in the production, but the experience it creates is purely badass and never lets go of the melodic touches.  In fact, this song boasts some of their best melodies.  The song also has an out-of-whack and creepy fade-out segment which lasts about a minute and a half, but does a great job with the dramatic flair without ever overdoing it.  I guess this is another favorite AVS song of mine.  But no matter how hard I tried, I didn't get the Samson reference I was expected because of that obvious title.  Huh.

"He who makes a beast out of himself..."Here it comes, their potential magnum opus.  Melodically their best song so far, does an excellent job shifting from energetic metal to slow ballady alt-rock like it's nothing, and does an excellent job bringing standard hardcore punk into the alt-metal world.  On top of that, it's got an incredibly catchy guitar riff.  Even if it's not a very extreme one, it's an empowering one.  I've gotten aching arms and fingers doing air guitar to this.  Probably the best thing that ever came out of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and the movie was already good.

Trashed and Scattered blasted me into the "powercore" of the last album, but it wasn't so jarring as the shift between ballads and almost-deathcore like on WtF.  It felt so natural because the previous songs set a standard of diversity and aura that feels difficult to break.  Once again we get some extremely catchy rhythms.  Or maybe it's just me because I'm a power metal sucker, and I've been waiting for a band to really pull of the combination of metalcore and power metal.  This is what I expect.

Next, Seize the Day... OK, maybe I should've expected this, but a piano-rooted alt-rock ballad threw me off.  It didn't fuck with the vibe or anything, but it was a really pleasant surprise.  There's an easy comparison many have made to GNR, which may detract from the originality of the song itself, but at least it's a totally different singer.  Anyway, it's pretty cute and it's a welcome addition.  I think the vocal melodies outshine the instrumentation, though.

Sidewinder is next.  Here we have another energetic ballad that steers into some fairly progressive melodic territory.  It hits all the right notes for a proper alchemical reaction, balancing the rhythms, moods and hard rock / heavy metal vibes. The song goes on with this surprisingly soothing energy for two-thirds of the song before kicking into a Latin rock solo, never breaking the vibes.  That's pretty smart of them.  Not really overlong for seven minutes.

There's a welcome return to racecar metalcore and thrash metal with The Wicked End, featuring a wonkier lead riff with a little bit of djent attached.  But the song slowly mutates overtime, playing with varying levels of energy before somehow naturally working its way into a slow, symphonic chorus during the middle section and helping to overlap the third act until it kicks back into the thrash.  Is this the band's Stairway to Heaven?  Or is it just lacking focus?  No.  No way it's lacking focus.  It felt natural, and that's what makes it work.  The entire first album was loaded with metalcore tropes that didn't work together, so I'm going to approve this song and anyone can fight me on that if they want.  I'm a bit surprised this isn't the closer.  Maybe the album would be fine if it ended here, but I was gonna give the other three tracks a go and finish the album anyway.

The perfect way to start a song after that ambitious monster is with a slow pairing of acoustic guitar and violins recreating the wild west.  This is the beginning of Strength of the World.  Alright, after everything I've heard, I'll give them a spaghetti western beginning.  What does anyone have to lose?  It's not fucking with the flow.  After the minute-and-twenty-second intro, we get back into the electric guitars and build up into a thrash riff and goes into a fairly heavy and meaningful song that doesn't try very hard to go into more drama and relies on high-pitched guitars and the singer's voice to do all the work.  Personally, I think for nine minutes this should've had more focus, but it's not bad.  Besides, the song does mix it up again by bringing back the acoustic guitars and going into western ballad territory, and eventually into energetic riffs again and finally a cinematic violin outro.  It's another ambitious track, but it doesn't really have the same oomph or balance as The Wicked End.

The second-to-last track is Betrayed, and I feel like this one's a little melodically challenged.  The riffs and verses feel a little wonky and don't flow very well.  It's obvious they were trying a little too hard with this song, and that it was basically filler for a seventy-minute album.  Bad move, really.

This monolith ends with M.I.A.  It begins how I expect, with a softer intro before forcing itself back into energetic territory.  Thankfully, the band chose the right genre to go back to: metalcore, their roots.  But this time, the melodies work and the unpredictability is balanced. I mean, the melodies aren't amazing, but they drive this eight minute song from beginning to end and never loses its grip.

Alright, I'm extremely happy to say that I've given their iconic third album a spin.  And now to goad half the metal community into pointing their guns at me: I ate the majority of this album up.  It may be overly ambitious, but it's good to see they were trying a bunch of new things, despite the fact that the overambition leads the album to be frontloaded, especially due to the shorter lengths in the first half.  They seem to have largely forsaken metalcore, but they kept the personality traits and made something pretty fun.  This album might not always have the best songs, but it fits all of my standards for a good album.  The biggest reason I liked this album is that it handles genres and melodies exactly how I would if I were in a metal band (although I'd be heavier, and less reliant on epics).  Overall, great album by a band finding their ground, even if they have some toning down to do.

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Rexorcist Rexorcist / April 26, 2024 03:26 AM
Waking the Fallen

OK, nobody liked the Avenged Sevenfold debut album, and neither did I.  They say this one's pretty good for the fans, though, so I've got big hopes for this.  Finally getting around to these guys, I'm eagerly awaiting the moment I get to turn on City of Evil for the first time, but I don't want to do that until I get a really good idea of how the band evolved within the first three albums.

Like the first album, this starts out with a decent intro which gets up right into the darker vibes the band is going for.  Unholy Confessions felt dull, under-produced and dreary in its tropes.  It pains me that it became a music video.  But I found that Chapter Four was much more packed, keeping a consistent melodic vibe with its overlapping vocals and slight Gothic touch, and even had a lead riff vaguely reminiscent of the energy of my favorite franchise to compare metal songs to: F-Zero.  There's definitely a poppier thing going on here, but that's an improvement from the chaos of the debut album.  This definitely deserved to be the lead single for this album.  Remenissions starts out with the unspoken combo that I call "powercore," a genre I would totally kickstart if I were in a metal band.  Unfortunately, this is where it becomes clear that the band is steering too close to the "similar tempos" trope that many genres fall victim to.  I wasn't expecting the Latin acoustic segment, though.  Weirdly added, but somehow nice.  Desecration Through Reverence shows a bit more focus on mood-building and justifies the existence of the shifting tropes in a single song in the follow-up to their debut.  It feels so much more natural than everything the debut features.

I didn't expect many differences out of Side B, but I was hoping.  Turns out, my hopes were satisfied even for a little while.  As soon as this slower, alternative metalcore album with a deeper emotional vibe ends, the album steers RIGHT INTO POWER METAL like it was nothing.  This side ends with a basic combination of the temp tricks of the last two songs, and I can't really say this decision does anything for the album.  Despite the progressive nature and melodic prowess, it's a filler song.  Radiant Eclipse is slower, more alternative and rooted in traditional metal ballad behavior while maintaining the signature edge.  This six minute track really was a breath of fresh air that, unlike the pop rock track in the debut, Warmness of the Soul, which felt like a relief of fresh air from the crappy metalcore, is a perfectly fitting alternative song that completely continues the darker vibes of the album while building on previously established influences on this album to become its own thing.  Next was I Won't See You Tonight, Pt. 1.  One look at the length and I thought to myself, "What kind of song on a metalcore album like this lasts nine minutes!?"  My first thought was a fairly proggy ballad which probably builds on the gothic elements suggested by the secondary genre tag on this album's RYM page.  It gained a very slight heaviness from its standard ballad energy at the start, but it lasts that way throughout the whole nine minutes, so I only got about two thirds of it right.  It's really just an overlong ballad.

So now that that was over with, right back into the screechy metalcore like it's not a jarring difference.  This is Part 2.  They could've at least built into the conflict rather than making it instantaneous.  And of course, this song goes right into djenty weirdness to add another trope to the mix... although, this is the first song in this overlong album to do so, so I'm not too bothered by the trope.  Ironically, Clairvoyant Disease goes right back into alternative ballad territory, once again creating a jarring effect on the flow.  And finally, there's And All Things will End, which starts off with a riff similar to many Iced Earth songs, vaguely reminiscing thrash and power, but feeling right for the album here.  It's got much of the same drama as well, but the melodies are only decent and it doesn't hold a candle to any Iced Earth classics.

OK, I'm not gonna call this one of my favorite metalcore albums, but I'd say this album made AVS an easy band to LIKE, as opposed to an easy band to LOVE.  Their songs are poppy enough, maybe too poppy for metalcore and never displaying high points of creativity, but they try as much as they can with the genre they chose for themselves at the time and managed to keep things fairly entertaining with some sense of variety and a much better sense of emotion.

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Rexorcist Rexorcist / April 26, 2024 02:07 AM
Sounding the Seventh Trumpet

I've been putting off these guys for forever and I don't know why.  Maybe it's because I'm not really into alternative metal or related genres like multiple.  Now I've always liked Bat Country ever since I heard it on SSX On Tour for Gamecube, and it was one of many songs I kept on the custom playlist with classics like Stand Up and Shout by Dio, Dynamite by Scorpions and Run to the Hills by Iron Maiden.  There were others, but I quickly associated myself with the song.

I understand that the band is a very flavorful one, and has reinvented themselves multiple times, even after just one or two albums.  As an Arctic Monkeys and Led Zeppelin fan, I have absolutely no problem with this.  In fact, from what I understand, these guys are supposed to have sucked as a metalcore band, so in my curiosity I'll likely get through all of their albums soon.  But despite the fact that I've put them off for far too long (Bilbo Baggins, 2001), the biggest reason I'm checking them out right now is so I can have an opinion on them.  This was likely influenced not only by my recent curiosity pertaining to their other songs and the knowledge of their diverse history, but out of a Reddit conversation involving the qualifications of a metal band on Metallum.  So I'm gonna check them out from the start.

The somewhat symphonic and cinematic intro is nice, but as soon as these guys dig right into the metalcore, they lose all sense of atmospheric building, and stem into a random and yet surprisingly predictable and tropy metalcore band.  I really did NOT like "Turn the Other Way."  Its lack of organization was so amateurish that it might as well have stemmed from a poorly-recorded black metal pre-debut album garage demo.  There are only slight improvements over the next two songs, with a welcome edition of the Bad Religion-style melodic skate sound making its way into a little bit of The Art of Subconscious Illusion with the unpredictability feeling a little more organized, almost like a metalcore variant of NoMeansNo, not that they hold a candle to NoMeansNo, who are probably the greatest hardcore band on Earth.  It even gets pretty creepy near the end, which I have to appreciate for a band who just named themselves Avenged Sevenfold at the time.  But immediately after, the album gets samey, and the tropes just take turns with no direction other than to display the popular tropes, which means the real reason the last track worked was simply because it was a better variant of an otherwise chaotic mess all restricting itself into one genre.

It gets to the point where the piano rock song Warmness of the Soul is a breath of fresh air as opposed to a sore thumb situation because its simple and catchy sound is like a pillow in comparison to the tiring metalcore tropes.  And the album practically stays that way until we get their attempt at a Stairway to Heaven of their own with it going into softer melodic territory before going back into edgy metalcore tropes.  This means that the album only proves that Avenged Sevenfold had not grapsed creativity yet and tried to take an easy way into metal fame.  Obviously, it didn't work out yet.

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Rexorcist Rexorcist / April 26, 2024 12:08 AM

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