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I've checked out both releases by Excessive Force before when they were a German industrial band. But did you know that they relocated to California and switched to early straight edge metalcore? It's hard to imagine a band changing from industrial to metalcore in the 90s. Probably because I'M KIDDING!!! That's not really what happened! This is an entirely different band with a similar name. There are already a few bands out there named Excessive Force, one other being a white supremacist band.
The 90s straight edge metalcore band Excessive Force made one of the heaviest albums of the scene at that time. It's all within the vocal fury, riffing punches, and drumming assault. And that drumming style would plant the seed for later bands of that genre and maybe even, dare I say it, nu metal.
"Those Who Were" already shows the drumming wrath by Justin McMahon, with the groove and the guitar riffing going well together. The instrumentation is definitely worth moshing to, including the audible yet dirty bass and abrasive vocals. Now for "Distress"... As of writing this review, I've watched Zootopia 2 yesterday and an outside-world friend of mine told me about how dark and violent it is for a Disney movie. Sorry but he's wrong. There's far more darkness and violence in this track, in both the music and lyrics ("I'm breaking the chain and I can hear the bones breaking"). An anthemic mosher! Next, "From Within" is a shorter track that adds some deathly riffing to the metalcore. Proto-deathcore!? Then we have the more hardcore "Backtrack" that ends with a crushing breakdown.
We're already approaching the second half of the album as "Vengeance" makes its mysterious entrance, leading into solid riffing. Vocalist Dan Gump repeatedly declares "Never will I follow blindly!", and some Sabbath-like sections are in great balance with the faster parts. Well done! Then "Misfortune" is one of, if not THE best track here. It's quite strong in the lyrical message of self-reflection and the kick-A riffing. The heavy drumming is also irresistible. Heading deeper in the lyrics is "Judgement Day". Here the music is more melodic while still dark and heavy.
The title track is interestingly the shortest one in the album and placed towards the end while not being the final track. The music and lyrics are absolutely earth-shattering and make another brutal highlight. "No Excuses" actually doesn't sound too far off from Underoath's earlier more extreme material, though don't expect any of the more blackened aspects. "Forwarned" is an unlisted hidden track which has some of the melodic yet brutal riffing later used by As I Lay Dying and For the Fallen Dreams.
I think I would appreciate it more if that hidden track was listed and placed before that 5-minute epic. That would really make In Your Blood the awesome offering that is has potential to be. It's sad that both this band and the German industrial band Excessive Force are no longer active beyond a couple releases, but let's enjoy them while we can!
Favorites: "Those Who Were", "Distress", "Vengeance", "Misfortune", "In Your Blood"
2025 was an absolutely brutal year for metalcore. Both in terms of the new music that was released as well as many of the older records that I got around to. This has been a consistent decline in quality for years and further exacerbated by metalcore being the dominant style of metal in the mainstream. So despite my best efforts to avoid metalcore in my spare time, I'm still beat over the head with disposable albums from Bury Tomorrow, Architects, Slaughter to Prevail, among others. But earlier in this year I heard Hit It! for the first time and was taken by surprise by how good it was! This is like if the electronicore of Electric Callboy was somehow infused with the more accessible stylings of Thornhill. And even that doesn't fully encompass every style/influence Vianova have on Hit It! Now to its credit, the album does have a solid flow. The intense djentcore elements are kept rather sparse and are used for artistic effect. The record has a smooth texture even through the style changes, such as the shoegaze "Future Nostalgia" that transforms into a quasi-Deafheaven groove. I think the biggest issue is in the production, and more specifically, how the songwriting hurts the low end of the mix. Many songs on Hit It! take inspiration from djent in its guitar riffing, but songs like "Melanchronic" have this off-putting groove where the bass just feels like its been pushed into the track unprovoked, which is a shame because the opening synth line hooked me in right away.
Despite this, I think that the pacing of Hit It! is excellent and does not run just status quo in the metalcore sphere. And that might turn a few people off of it entirely. But if you want a metalcore record where the songwriting is something worth a damn, then smash that play button and give it a try!
Best Songs: Future Nostalgia, Oh No (Believer), Whatever Alright, Obsolete
I read somewhere recently that Jacob Bannon did not necessarily think that the world needed a new Converge record, but that the band themselves did. There was a time, not too long ago when I would have probably deemed that I never needed a Converge record at all, but that has been well documented on Metal Academy already. The tides have turned and I find myself on much less turbulent terms with some of the content of The Revolution clan, to the point where I can enjoy the harder sounding metalcore releases. As it turns out then, Love Is Not Enough is right up my street.
It sounds like a lot more of a riffy affair than I remember from previous outings with the band’s releases. The start of 'Bad Faith' shows this particular trait well I find. Likewise, the grinding sensibilities of 'Distract and Divide' is an absolute treasure. These short bursts of fury that cover the first four tracks of the album create a real sense of momentum early in the listening experience. As a result, the instrumental 'Beyond Repair' almost sucks some life from proceedings, However, I find it is a very clever little track. Its broken percussion befits the track title superbly when you take time to listen under a more critical mindset.
That raging aggression is soon back alongside those big riffs for the remainder of Love Is Not Enough. It is an accomplishment to cram such a rewarding listening experience into a little over half an hour. I find it has appeal for its scathing honesty and the bluntness of its messaging also. Love Is Not Enough as an album title tells you all you need to know really. This is a record with a lot of bitterness that is borne out of suffering, told by souls who no longer wish to stay silent on the matter. Probably the best metalcore album I have ever experienced.
Who would've thought epic blackened deathcore would make a global impact as it has in the past few years? In the early 2010s, there was only a small handful of bands of that style, specifically The Breathing Process, Winds of Plague, Make Them Suffer, and Betraying the Martyrs. Later on in that decade, Lorna Shore and Shadow of Intent mastered this blend of deathcore with symphonic black metal elements, with the former band giving the genre a viral boost. Yeah, I owe it all to Lorna Shore for opening my ears to a more epic take on an otherwise brutal genre. And I can almost say the same about this band who has just released a new EP...
Worm Shepherd are back with a new lineup and an EP to start this new era. The only founding member left is guitarist Tre Purdue, and sticking with him since their previous album Hunger is fellow guitarist Harry Tadayon. The 3 new members are vocalist Ian Smith (The Archaic Epidemic), bassist Tom O’Malley (Ingested), and returning drummer Leo McClain (Psycho-Frame). This EP, Dawn of the Iconoclast is the dawn of something new!
"The Omen" starts the album ominously with clean guitar strumming and rising orchestration before the band attacks with their usual deathcore. And what's a deathcore highlight without some ravaging breakdowns? The one in the end is the most BRUTAL. "Soulless Lament" is the most Lorna Shore-sounding track here. The melodramatic choruses are in great contrast with the crushing breakdowns and give any deathcore song a big kick. "Feast" is more mid-paced and atmospheric, but later on, the blackened side of them would snap you in half and tape you back together, even without a single breakdown.
The shorter "Sanctified Rot" is another standout with technical shredding by Tre Perdue. It all comes down to "Whispers of a Buried Land", the grand 7-minute closing epic. From the orchestral/choral grandeur to towering riffing and breakdown, it's a dark glorious experience that should be worth it for any fan of deathcore and/or epic deathcore. It doesn't surpass the previous album's ending epic, but it's very close.
It seems Worm Shepherd have a new journey ahead of them, and all it took was a display of their usual sound performed by new members. Dawn of the Iconoclast has made sure that their epic extreme greatness isn't going anywhere, and there shall be more of that on the horizon!
Favorites: "The Omen", "Sanctified Rot", "Whispers of a Buried Land"
A step down from Shrine from a few years ago. The individual songs have become less focused and do not have any pazazz when it comes to ear catching melodies. The album undoubtedly feels more like a "vibes" album where the strong sound of a melodic metalcore foundation with a death metal tinge is going to be the aspect that listeners will remember the most. Zenith has ambitions of being a more complete project from Shrine and that comes through in some really intense production which is highlighted by a far improved vocal performance. Scott Kennedy's vocals have always been a bit of a presence when the harsh death metal screaming comes out, but his singing was quite lackluster on the previous record. This time around, the clean vocals are greatly improved; the rasp in the timbre fits well with the instrumental style and does not create this weird hybrid effect where it feels like you're listening to two songs at once. I wish that I could have enjoyed Zenith as much as Shrine, but the heightened expectations of how impressed I was by Shrine left me feeling a little bit empty here. The texture of the album can only work so much when your audience already knows your playbook. At some point, Bleed From Within are going to have to broaden their scope.
Best Songs: In Place of your Halo, Zenith, Immortal Desire, Dying Sun
For this small marathon of deathcore releases to listen to and review, I saved the most brutal one for last. I don't know anyone who has confused this band with Within Temptation because of that name, but it's good that no one has, because they're complete polar opposites. There's no female-vocal symphonic metal here, only brutal slam-infused deathcore. Actually a full-on combination of Within Destruction and Within Temptation's styles would be something in the age of symphonic deathcore. Anyway...
Back then, Within Destruction wasn't the anime-influenced nu metal/deathcore (animetal) band that they would eventually be. In Deathwish, they were really digging deep into the depths of Hell to unleash deadly brutality. And this was around the time Mental Cruelty was doing that as well before their symphonic blackened deathcore direction.
The intro track "External Interference" is just an audio sample where some guy mentions alien invasions that he supposedly found. Interesting setup but skippable. The title track crashes in with guest vocals by Duncan Bentley (Xavleg, Vuvlodynia). And no matter the brutality, the production sounds clearer than other underground extreme metal albums. "False Revelation" follows more typical leads and rhythms in the deathcore genre. Same with "Extinction", but they're all still great.
Occasional leads help balance out the monstrous grooves in "Torture Ritual". The more feral vocals in "Human Defect" are so beastly, in part due to the guest appearance by Infant Annihilator's Dickie Allen. "Downfall of Humanity" exemplifies their sound the best, including an apocalyptic breakdown midway throuh.
That breakdown is nothing compared to that of "Darkness Swallows Life". That and the drums there would f***ing peel you down layer by layer then stitch you back up. "Self Hatred" is more straight with catchy yet heavy riffs, leads, and atmosphere. The soloing is also quite interesting. "Death Awaits Us All" is the 5-minute epic with some great variation. As far as their later sound would go, that one's pretty close. The outro "HMR45" ends the album with a more robotic audio sample.
Deathwish is one of the most extreme deathcore albums I've heard to have clear production. Although I'm quite used to the more muddy albums out there, here things are so polished that it's like I'm in the studio witnessing them record. And it's quite well-written too! Though will it make me a new fan of the band? I'll go with possibly....
Favorites: "Deathwish", "Human Defect", "Downfall of Humanity", "Darkness Swallows Life", "Death Awaits Us All"
Continuing the trend of nu-infused deathcore is Left to Suffer, which is a new band to me as well. I've really only heard one song from this band, which also happens to be in this album, so we'll talk about that when we get there. The band was formed in Atlanta, Georgia in 2019 and have since released 3 albums, with some songs having guest vocalists from bands like Lorna Shore, Ov Sulfur, and Fit for an Autopsy. And today, we'll be checking out their second album Feral.
What an aptly titled name for an album! All you can expect is the headbanging primal aggression of their nu-ish metal/deathcore, which is apparently all the band wanted to make since they first formed. And it looks like they've achieved that goal in just 25 minutes of fire and fury.
We already reach thick depths in the title opener within the vocals and riffs. As the guitar rage bursts through, vocalist Taylor Barber unleashes his growls, with some clean singing in the more melodic sections. Add a couple kick-A breakdowns and we're in for a strong start. If you thought that was brutal, wait until you hear "Artificial Anatomy". Soon the heaviness speeds up and then you hear the fast growling rage of guest vocalist Kim Dracula. Taylor ends the track with a shrieking breakdown that practically makes that song their own "To the Hellfire"! Then it segues to their own "Of the Abyss", "Primitive Urge". I consider it that because of the melodic strings in the background, really adding a magic touch to the heavy aggression of guitar duo of Jacob Gordon and Peter Higgs. Not to mention the growls by Fit for an Autopsy's Joe Bad.
"Break the Fever" has more brutal drumming by Alex Vavra, and greater variety in Taylor's vocals from high to low. Those vocals reach their peak in the middle of the song along with the guitar effects. That part is so f***ed up but in a great way. And with the searing soloing, that marks another excellent highlight. Heading into "Recluse", you can imagine yourself getting ready for a battle motivated by Taylor's shouts and the audible bass of Christian Nowatzki. Full-on nu deathcore hits your face, only calming down for brief moments. I wouldn't be surprised if that song ended up in the DOOM Eternal soundtrack.
Then comes another strong standout in "Illusion of Sleep". It's short yet pulverizing in the breakdowns. Kinda like "Disappoint Me", another heavy banger. From the Architects-style BLEGHS to the typical deathcore breakdowns, there's so much impact in just those two minutes. "Consistent Suffering" is filled with feral death/metalcore. At over the one and a half minute mark is an unreal blend of sped up trap with the usual growled vocals. Those lyrics may seem sad, but the vocals make them sound mad.
Left to Suffer has their raging strength on display in Feral. Their destructive force is not one to be taken lightly. I wouldn't say this is the best deathcore album I've heard, but it's solid and attacks like a motherf***er....
Favorites: "Artificial Anatomy", "Break the Fever", "Illusion of Sleep", "Consistent Suffering"
I consider Love is Not Enough to be Converge's own Blind Guardian The God Machine. While Blind Guardian added more symphonics to their power metal, reaching that aspect's height in the special orchestral album Legacy of the Dark Lands, and then returning to their heavier roots in their new album, Converge added more atmosphere to their sound, reaching that aspect's height in the special post-sludge collab with Chelsea Wolfe, Bloodmoon. And now they're back to their heavier roots in Love is Not Enough!
These Massachusetts-based metalcore pioneers have a sealed lineup of Jacob Bannon (vocals), Kurt Ballou (guitars), Nate Newton (bass), and Ben Koller (drums). Aside from their poor debut Halo in a Haystack, the albums that followed are some of the greatest I've heard in non-melodic metalcore, and their new album continues that streak.
The title opener already launches you back into the thrashy metalcore/mathcore of their 2000s material, all in pure savagery. Then "Bad Faith" has more relatably helpless lyrics. The idea of someone being in an uncontrollable situation is something many of us have unfortunately experienced, including me. "Distract and Divide" is a minute-and-a-half blitz of rage against society. "To Feel Something" continues that helpless scenario with the idea of being numbed by insecure fears.
"Beyond Repair" is a different composition, a two-and-a-half-minute dark ambient interlude. It's OK, but a little weak. This album would be perfect without it. "Amon Amok" (is that a pun of Amon Amarth?) is more exciting as the lyrics tackle life's demons. "Force Meets Presence" is more expansive, expanding without end until it does end.
"Gilded Cage" takes on the epidemic of the world's industries. It is one of three over 4-minute epics to end the album, the second of which is "Make Me Forget You". This one lets rip the band's wild side as memories fade into silence in the lyrics. "We Were Never the Same" maintains the band's metalcore roots while restoring some of the post-sludge from Bloodmoon. The best way to end this half-hour journey!
September will mark the 25th anniversary of Converge's biggest album and America's biggest tragedy. I say Love is Not Enough is, well, not enough to surpass their 2000s material and All We Love We Leave Behind, but it does beat The Dusk in Us. Witness the return of the band's early hardcore as they protest against the darkness of humanity!
Favorites: "Love is Not Enough", "Distract and Divide", "Amon Amok", "Make Me Forget You", "We Were Never the Same"
Those last couple reviews for albums by Enterprise Earth and Fit for an Autopsy were my attempts at checking out the progressive side of deathcore, ending with fantastic results. Now we're going into the more nu-ish deathcore bands. I actually heard of The Last Ten Seconds of Life before this review because one of my brother's friends likes that band, along with a few of their tracks being added to my Revolution playlists, but that band was too brutal for me at the time. Maybe I can enjoy the brutality more now...
The metalcore/deathcore scene expanded a lot throughout the new millennium. Some might find some bands listenable, while others don't. This Pennsylvanian band storms through with some of the most aggressive riffs, breakdowns, and vocals you can imagine. Any open-minded heavy modern metalheads can recognize their strong talent.
"As the World Turns Over" begins their brutal nu metal-ish direction. The vocals sounds so monstrous! "The Box" has more massive guitar assault as the near-undecipherable lyrics growled by then-vocalist Storm Strope bite religion in the a**. Leaning into post-hardcore a bit is "North of Corpus". Then "Meant to Be Free" is covered in sinister riffing and breakdowns that are more horror-filled than The Exorcist.
"Guillotine Queen" has more of those growling vocals blended with whispering. Speeding up a little is "Pain is Pleasure" with powerful atmosphere. "Ballad of the Butcher" has all the different extreme aspects deathcore has. "Sacrifice (The Prince)" is so d*mn perfect, absolutely impressive with the brutal music and irreligious lyrics. F*** yeah!
"Changing Forms" continues the harsh growling and crushing guitars. We actually get a blues rock-sounding solo in the lighter yet ominous "Heavy Headed". Next up, "Junkie - Sprite" is an interesting highlight. Although they're still deathcore, that one leans into some of the chaos of Car Bomb while staying in a mid-tempo pace close to the industrial groove of Fear Factory and Mnemic. Finally, the vocals have more effect in "The Dream is Dead" which returns to the earlier brutal heaviness.
In a world where melodic pop songs have influenced even metal bands, The Last Ten Seconds of Life avoid those influences like the plague. Soulless Hymns is filled with heavy rage not for the faint-hearted. Anyone up for some brutal fury should take on these hymns of destruction....
Favorites: "As the World Turns Over", "The Box", "Meant to Be Free", "Ballad of the Butcher", "Sacrifice (The Prince)", "Junkie - Sprite"
Fit for an Autopsy is one of those bands I had never really thought of listening to. Likely because at the time this album came out, I was still quite selective about deathcore. I wasn't up to trying the more brutal bands, or at least sounding brutal in the name, like Fit for an Autopsy. So far, all I heard about their 2022 album Oh What the Future Holds is that apparently they took a more atmospheric progressive direction. Well, seeing how much I love the new Enterprise Earth album, let's not waste any more time...
You have no idea how quickly my interest went up in Fit for an Autopsy's music. Sure, many people have started their FFAA journey with The Great Collapse of The Sea of Tragic Beasts, but Oh What the Future Holds pretty much kickstarted it for me in an instant. Any doubt I have for this band is long gone!
Sounding unpleasant yet beautiful, the opening title intro will have you at the edge of your seat. After some ambient piano, it explodes into an intense barrage of vocals and riffs. "Pandora" is where everything hits full charge. The chaotic rhythms and dramatic melodies fit well together, alongside lyrics like "Too many graves, not enough shovels". Then "Far From Heaven" is more groove-ish in the riffs and drums. The chorus is well-paced, and the song gets more destructive all the way up to a brutal breakdown.
"In Shadows" is absolutely hammering! Nothing but relentless darkness to destroy all in its path. "Two Towers" has more smooth melody before it snaps back into aggressive heaviness. "A Higher Level of Hate" has more frantic riffs, drums, and vocals, all of which make another powerful highlight.
"Collateral Damage" is even more monstrous. You can witness a huge firestorm of blast beats, vocals, and leads, swirling around and burning different lands beneath. "Savages" attacks with savage technicality to headbang to. "Conditional Healing" continues the explosive energy. "The Man That I Was Not" is an awesome 7-minute closing epic. It impresses me with the alternation between cleans and growls. Just like the 7-minute closing epic of that Enterprise Earth album, it is the "best for last"!
This kick-A masterpiece that is Oh What the Future Holds has nothing filler at all and has allowed me to hear the top-notch talent of Fit for an Autopsy. I'm pretty much THIS close to letting it surpass Lorna Shore's Pain Remains as the best deathcore album of 2022. Indeed the future of deathcore holds great promise!
Favorites: "Pandora", "In Shadows", "A Higher Level of Hate", "Collateral Damage", "The Man That I Was Not"
Is it just me or was my deathcore exploration very quiet during these past few months since the release of the new Lorna Shore album? I've already made Make Them Suffer's debut Neverbloom a feature release, but for anything new or not yet heard by me, the well was run dry... Until a few awesome discoveries have popped up that made this a promising year for my deathcore journey. This 2024 Enterprise Earth album is the first of those discoveries, and my first deathcore review of 2026!
Death: An Anthology has made me remember that deathcore doesn't have to be symphonic to make a masterpiece. Throughout its literal hour of power, the brutality of the genre hits you hard while spreading into technicality and even some of the deep downtuned stylings of djent and some bright melody here and there.
There's still some orchestral beauty in the intro "Abyss" that includes synthesized vocal harmonies and guitar melodies, almost like the missing link between Cynic's first two albums. Of course, the savagery you'll soon witness will be far beyond what Cynic can do. It all crashes in with the vicious "Face of Fear". This chaotic blend of deathcore and elements of technical mathcore pretty much separates this band from the league of deathcore bands that take on the symphonic blackened approach. Then out of nowhere comes an epic clean chorus. "The Reaper’s Servant" continues the chaos, this time blurring the lines between brutal deathcore and melodeath. Adding to the massacre is the guest vocals by Darius Tehrani of Spite. "Spineless" starts off beautiful but then unleashes seething anger in the music and lyrics, "You spineless sack of festering sh*t!"
The djenty "King of Ruination" is basically full-on Meshuggah gone deathcore. It also has guest vocals by Shadow of Intent vocalist Ben Duerr, and it's probably the first track I've heard with his vocals that doesn't have any orchestrations. I love it! Next track "Casket of Rust" is one of two epics surpassing the 7-minute mark in length, and it further shows the band's tech-deathcore side. "I, Divine" blends their deathcore with some melodeath from Soilwork and even Hinayana with its occasional doomy melody. Leveling up the moshpit is "Malevolent Force" which is an absolutely grand smasher with some guitar soloing by Wes Hauch (Alluvial).
"Accelerated Demise" is a progressive instrumental almost like what BTBAM would make. A fun instrumental! Then "Blood and Teeth" may be the closest we have to a deathcore ballad, though the ravaging destruction is still around at times. "Curse of Flesh" is a kick-A 7-minute epic, again making the "best for last" aspect in some albums from deathcore and other genres. I absolutely enjoy the guest appearance by Trivium's Matt Heafy.
For those who think this offering lacks focus and is too pompous, you may want to reconsider that thought. It's not everyday a deathcore band can blend together elements of many genres into their sound, and that should be praised. With Death an Anthology and other epic masterpieces in these past couple years, there is a future for deathcore!
Favorites: "Face of Fear", "King of Ruination", "Casket of Rust", "Malevolent Force", "Accelerated Demise", "Curse of Flesh"
I have given Neverbloom around three spins over the past couple of days and it has grown on me, from my first impression at least. When they settle down into rhythm and riffage, there are some genuinely entertaining moments for me. Tracks such as ‘Widower’ and ‘Maelstrom’ standout as being high points in this regard and I suspect there could be more of these moments if the arrangement was just a little better thought through. I think the piano is perhaps the worst conceived part of the instrumentation, often it sounds like someone has started playing another track over the top of the current one and it does take a couple of seconds to reconcile that it is actually on the same track. The synths stab perfectly well to create a sense of theatre and drama where they get deployed, but for a “symphonic deathcore” record, I find it surprising how little focus the symphonic elements actually get.
Vocally there is nothing here to surprise me as it seems to be pretty standard deathcore fare in all honesty, but it is the riffs that are my only real positive takeaway from this record. They are by no means perfect, but they certainly do land a lot better than most of the rest of what is on offer. I get the sense that Make Them Suffer had some good ideas going into this one, and I am of course giving them some rope as this was their debut. However, the ideas never really shine as I suspect they could, appearing to be sacrificed by a confusing, if not outright disorientating arrangement problem that is something of a curse on the album I feel.
I listen to a lot of deathcore during my workouts nowadays and so I am perhaps a little more desensitised to The Revolution clan’s previous penchant to overwhelm this well-travelled metal head than I was some three or four years ago. Although Neverbloom does not land all that well with me, I still enjoyed the discovery experience and could be tempted by a listen to a later album to see if they did improve at all.
I have made my metal origin story public for quite awhile now but for those who are uninformed, I was not listening to metal early in my lifetime. It was not until I became a rebellious teenager that my musical interests broke off from the adult contemporary that my family was listening to. And I knew I did not want to listen to the mainstream pop of the Backstreet Boys, Destiny's Child, or the Black Eyed Peas. I didn't discover Alice in Chains or Tool until my first year in high school! But the thing was I still didn't feel like I fit in with the other "cool" kids in school because the metal I was listening to was so much different than theirs. So I asked "what are you listening to?" and they showed me a copy of The End of Heartache by Killswitch Engage. I did not love it at first, but as my ear for music changed, so did my appreciation for the album and the band who created it.
So, in 2006, As Daylight Dies comes out and the promotional single, "My Curse" is everywhere! And it's a great single too. Some might even go so far as to say its the greatest melodic metalcore song of all time. And with this year being the 20th anniversary of the album that changed metalcore, I went back and listened to it and checked to see how it stand up and... I mean, it's still a pretty solid mid 2000s melodic metalcore record, but perhaps my older (and wiser) ears have soured on it more than I thought they would.
I don't know what it is about As Daylight Dies that has changed over the years because all of the pieces are there for a solid metalcore album: the use of breakdowns to compliment choruses, a mammoth refrain led by the unmistakable vocals of Howard Jones, great bass presence and tasteful percussion, and a strong variety in keys, tempos and styles between the tunes. And yet, I'm not sure I feel the excitement from songs like "Break the Silence" and "Daylight Dies" as I did twenty years ago. Maybe it's... stagnation?
I do not listen to metalcore like I once did and that might be to its benefit. Because if I listened to a new metalcore album (or more) every week, I would be more likely to rate this album poorly, despite its cultural significance. So much of the modern melocore sound (i.e. Architects, Born of Osiris, Polaris, etc.) use Killswitch Engage, and more specifically As Daylight Dies, as the framework for their newest releases and there isn't a whole lot of innovation. And it leaves the whole genre as a whole feeling like it's been left behind. I know there are modern melocore bands who are growing from the As Daylight Dies era of Killswitch Engage, but even listening to this record twenty years later, I cannot help but feel like it has lost its grandeur... and I wish it hadn't.
Best Songs: This is Absolution, My Curse, Still Beats Your Name, Eye of the Storm, Desperate Times
Spiritbox is one of the most popular bands in modern metal. They made it big with their string of singles throughout the era of the pandemic and the album those songs would appear in, Eternal Blue. I remember listening to that album when it first came out, and I enjoyed the heavy technicality and spacey melody. For some reason though, the appeal didn't last long for me. Must be due to the more mainstream alt-ish sound, but at least it's enough for my brother to enjoy a couple of those songs.
In between that album and their new one Tsunami Sea, the band released two EPs. The one I've chosen to check out is this one, The Fear of Fear. It has definitely sparked up some memories of when I listened to Eternal Blue, being a solid continuation of that album's alt-metalcore sound with a few industrial/cyber/nu metal vibes thrown in...
To open this offering, "Cellar Door" has some of the heaviest I've heard from the band. Glitchy electronics and nu-infused guitar guide you through this violent chaos complete with crushing breakdowns. The second track and fellow single "Jaded" has the technicality and emotion of Architects while blending it with the softer side of Eternal Blue. "Too Close / Too Late" has a gentle drift of beauty, especially in the chorus.
"Angel Eyes" brings back the monstrous destruction. The textured bass by Josh Gilbert (ex-As I Lay Dying) are adjacent to djenty guitar intensity along with the harsh vocal fury of vocalist Courtney LaPlante. In "The Void", the band knows just how to hit with all their power! The beautiful emotion carries on in the closing "Ultraviolet".
To summarize the sound of this band and EP, well...it's all about experimenting with what they are without setting a strict sound. This allows them to break boundaries at ease, and make the band more than just simply alt-metalcore. It's not a direct sequel to Eternal Blue, more like an expansion of that album's sound in a way that makes this EP stand out with its own. So let's ride on for a glimpse of what to hear from this rising band....
Favorites: "Cellar Door", "Angel Eyes", "The Void"
It's not often for a band to last two decades with most of the members intact since the beginning. 4 of the 7 members of Fear of Domination have stayed together for all of their albums; male vocalist Saku Solin, bassist Lauri Ojanen, and guitarists Jan-Erik Kari and Johannes Niemi. One other longtime member, keyboardist Lasse Raelahti joined the band in 2012. And now there are two new members for a new album in a new era...
Katharsis is their brand-new 7th album released in the beginning of this year 2026. It marks the debut of female vocalist Jessica Salmi and drummer Anton Nisonen. It also continues the trance-filled melodic metalcore sound from their previous album VI: Revolution, while bringing back their earlier industrial/cyber metal side.
"Alone" is a h*ll of a strong energetic start. The verses screamed by both vocalists are in a great contrast with the catchy sung choruses for a well-balanced composition. Then there's the more simplistic "Dead Anyway", having a slow intro before the dancey keyboards enter alongside the metal instrumentation and vocal power. "Monsters" is the first single for the album, released nearly two years prior. Although the intro sounds a bit dull, the riff attacks with headbanging rhythm, encouraging you all to sing and shout along. The soloing between the second and final choruses is filled with shredding fury. Up next is "Imposter" which is more grandiose, thanks to the synthesized orchestrations and choir. It's both dramatic and dynamic!
The groovy "Last Words" is heavy in both the metal and the electronics. I can predict that song being a live staple! There's nothing silly about "Primum Noce Apte" when their earlier cutthroat melodeath riffing makes a comeback. I feel they could've let out their rage longer though. "Rabbit Hole" starts off brutal before resting calm while still catchy.
We're heading into the final third of the album now, starting with another perfect track "All as One". They can do the whole "disco-metal" thing as well as Battle Beast, probably better! The final chorus has the most of their energy. "Endgame" is an epic single from the album seems to emphasize their earlier industrial/trance metal roots further. A hard-hitting masterpiece of a song! The finale "Feel" has similar gentle melancholy to Metanoia's closing track. I probably would've loved it more if not for the abrupt ending.
Fear of Domination still have their strong talent in Katharsis, with energetic songs worth both dancing and headbanging to. Despite a couple slight struggles somewhere, there's hope for their music to make a strong global impact....
Favorites: "Alone", "Imposter", "Last Words", "All as One", "Endgame"
Note: I've decided to try a new thing where for any of the favorites I've listed for a reviewed releases, the ones in bold are the ones I deem not just great, but true perfection.
Unexpectedly coming out on top of the current crop of feature releases is this three track EP from Trivium. For no reason other than rampant elitism, I have avoided Trivium for most of their career. Based on this EP, that could have been an even dumber decision than it first appears. Notwithstanding that this is a very short format to base any long term opinions from, there is still plenty here to have kept me entertained over the six or seven listens I found myself giving Struck Dead in just one day!
It is clear that my view that Trivium are just another annoying metalcore band are incorrect. Yes, there are elements of that style here, I cannot dispute that. However, there are some serious grooves going on during the riffing on ‘Bury Me With My Screams’. The cold, blunt and almost industrial chops of the title track are a bruising experience also. Add into the mix the fiery leads and anthemic vocals and there is a lot to be pleased with. Whilst I expected high energy levels to be on show, the EP goes much further, possessing an almost hardcore ferocity at times.
It is not an annoying overactive energy that I feared might haunt the release, there is a lot of maturity in these three tracks. ‘Six Walls’ might be the weaker of the tracks on offer but it is by no means terrible. After the intensity of the two first tracks I guess some balance was needed, even if those acoustic strings on the final track do mislead the listener into believing we will be needing on a power ballad. Suffering a little in the arrangement stakes, ‘Six Walls’ feels like a b-side at best but still keeps those energy levels well primed for the whole EP duration.
One of the things I love about metal is the diversity. When different genres come together, they bring some uniqueness to the table, creating a sweet feast. And one band that kinda do that is Ithilien. In their second album Shaping the Soul, these Belgians decide to do something unusual at the time, blending together folk metal and metalcore to make... folk-core! And this album came out 4 years after their more melodeath-oriented debut.
Throughout this thunderous 10-song 50-minute offering, expect some Eluveitie-esque epic folk metal with more hardcore riffing, bass, and vocals. There's still some of their earlier melodeath here and there, only in smaller chunks, leaving most of the heaviness to their modern metalcore side.
"Blindfolded" starts the album with a slow march of guitars and Celtic instruments, then when the screaming vocals enter the picture, the drumming tempo really speeds up. This is basically the kind of soundtrack Game of Thrones needs for their enemy-slashing battles. And when the mid-paced folk sections come back on, they're for getting hammered, partying, and simply headbanging to the loud heaviness. "Lies After Lies" continues that pace with added flute. It's more emotional while still having that heavy energy. The title track may be the closest we have to their melodeath roots. Everything's so frantic with bursts of melody and the usual background Celtic instrumentation. This killer opening group of tracks reaches its peak in the next track...
My favorite track here, "Walk Away", is the band's longest song at nearly 8 minutes. Slow folky melancholy is its main purpose, sounding epic without having to resort to much metal. The emotion is sadly lost in "If Only", which has nothing but hollow filler. The interlude "Emma" is nice and relaxing but doesn't do much either.
"Edelweiss" is named after a flower in Switzerland, though the song's relation to Switzerland has more in common with Eluveitie, complete with heavy raging fire. Another exceptional track is "Hopeless". There's more variation in the vocals and atmosphere, and maybe they can have more of that in their possible next album. "The Dive" explodes in melodic rage, though I feel like there could've been slightly more to ignite. "The Bear Dance" is a fun instrumental worth a LOTR-style victory dance party.
All in all, Shaping the Soul is a sold Ithilien album. This folk-core sound with small melodeath doses is quite fun and unique. And there's barely any reptition, other than that small mid-album slump. This should get metalheads interested and on the edge of their seats for their next album to come. Very soon, I hope....
Favorites: "Blindfolded", "Shaping the Soul", "Walk Away", "Edelweiss", "Hopeless"
I knew within the first few moments of "12/23/93" that I was going to get along just fine with Poison the Well's debut record from 1999, The Opposite of December...A Season of Separation. It is exactly the kind of post-hardcore/emo infused metalcore that came out of the late 1990s with acts like Hopesfall and Skycamefalling that I really love. The rawness of these recording is really noticeable with how punchy a lot of the breakdowns are. Poison the Well have done excellent work with cutting out the fat that becomes commonplace in many a post-punk and post-hardcore band around the turn of the millennium. The vocals are relentless in their genuine anxiety and passion, almost as if the vocalist screams are about to break down into wails at any moment. But as a counterpoint, the catchiness of the guitar riffs alongside some of those repetitive vocal lines just pushes this record above the rest. It is a wonderful blend of metalcore intensity alongside post-hardcore's more progressive songwriting.
Best Songs: A Wish For Wings That Work, Slice Paper Wrists, Nerdy, Mid Air Love Message, My Mirror No Longer Reflects
I think I found what might've given Northlane the idea to adopt more modern electronic elements in their later albums. Fellow NSW-based band The Arbitrary Method was only active for short EP in 2015, and that EP, Augmentation showcases a diverse mix of industrial/cyber metal and metalcore, and a small bit of nu metal. It's almost the same kind of blend heard in Northlane's Alien! Plus some touches of Cypecore and 2000s Mechina. Also, don't expect a lot of groove metal here, there's barely any of that...
To be more specific, there are the samples and synths expected in a Sphere release. And there are the simple yet heavy riffing and drums of metalcore, with some lyrics and vocals lean into nu metal territory. The end result is a great small offering that isn't perfect but still enjoyable.
The EP starts with the atmospheric title intro. Then the heavy beat starts in "Divide the Devil". Some of the guitar leads and vocals have a bit of a Trivium vibe in them, and that I love! "The Mirror" cranks up the industrial side in kind of a standard fashion. "Enslaved" has some of the best riffing, though sadly the verses are kind of generic, especially with some annoying background FX. "Defy" is the best track here, sounding quite catchy in the intro and chorus. Another track "Don’t Let Go" doesn't have the same memorability, but it's still OK. "Into Insanity" closes the album with another grand standout, even having Bjorn Strid from Soilwork behind the mic.
Augmentation is a solid EP that takes some cues from the 2000s era of metalcore and, to a lesser extent, nu metal, and gives it a futuristic industrial/cyber metal twist. Such a shame there isn't anything beyond this from the band, but it's worth listening and savoring. A more cyber Mushroomhead, I would say....
Favorites: "Divide the Devil", "Defy", "Into Insanity"
Dying Wish are a Portland based metalcore band who really surprised a couple of years ago with Symptoms of Survival with its balanced intensity. Two years later, the band is back with their third studio album and I can't help but feel like we've downgraded here.
And for starters, I think we have to look at the individual song structures found within Flesh Stays Together. This album appears to be broken up into three distinct types of songs. The first is the full frontal assault of hardcore punk fun on "A Curse Upon Iron" and " Surrender Everything". The second is the buildup song; it starts with a clean guitar tone and Emma's softer singing timbre, while evolving over time into something that feels like a real payoff like on "Nothing Like You" or the title track. And then everything else falls into some kind of Spiritbox sounding status quo 2020s metalcore album. Taking influence from Spiritbox might not be a deterrent in theory, but the execution feels lacking in any sense of growth from it.
Production is also taking a minor downgrade from Symptoms of Survival. For starters, Emma's harsh screams sound a lot less focused than the previous record; a lot of her syllables start to blend together and it causes the rest of album to lose its punch. The opening track "I Don't Belong Anywhere" sets the album off on the wrong foot by having Emma scream with spotty execution. The instrumentals are mostly good; the bass does have a strong presence throughout the record especially during the albums choruses and buildup tracks like "Heaven Departs". But on others, Dying Wish like to implement the tritone dissonant chord in the chugging guitars during the breakdown and for some reason, the bass just kind of disappears? The only other egregious production error was on the heavy track "Revenge In Carnage" where the instrumentals re-enter after a full stop and the mix cannot handle all of the additional noise all at once.
I do not dislike Flesh Stays Together by Dying Wish, however something about it just feels off to me. It feels like the band needed to cave into some arbitrary heaviness code in their contract and as a result, lost some of their identity as a metalcore band in the process. Groups with female vocalists will inevitably be compared to the likes of Spiritbox in the current metalcore climate, but Dying Wish were never trying to be Spiritbox. But with Flesh Stays Together, they might just be.
Best Songs: A Curse Upon Iron, Nothing Like You, Empty the Chamber, Flesh Stays Together
Trivium is back with their first new material in 4 years, Struck Dead! Well, it's a short 3-track EP, but one that really SLAMS. They have their usual thrashy melodic metalcore with fire and fury. It's an amazing way to make up for when their Poisoned Ascendancy tour with Bullet for My Valentine fell through partway, and it shall gets us geared up for their next album to come next year.
As the band continues to evolve throughout their over 25 years of existence, these heroes of Florida's modern metal scene aren't putting out the fire anytime soon. What you can expect from this EP is similar to the rest of their catalog, bloodthirsty riffing and epic melodies.
The first track and single, "Bury Me With My Screams" shows that the band is back with a vengeance, filled with awesome heavy groove. It's an explosion of crushing riffing, Matt Heafy's vocals ranging from raw screams to emotional cleans, and energetic drumming by Alex Bent. Truly a pit-ready anthem! The title track, "Struck Dead (Pain is Easier to Remember)" has that mid-paced groove with Heafy bellowing the track's title, "STRUCK. F***ING. DEAD!!!". And when it switches to the big melodic chorus, it already seems like a remake of their ultimate best track that is the In Waves title track. That is, until it speeds up for a long brutal thrash/groove bridge. It's just pure rage throughout, with the most of that in the breakdown. Enjoyable, but can't beat the other two tracks here and especially not "In Waves".
"Six Walls Surround Me" is the EP's 7-minute epic. It may just be the "And I Return to Nothingness title track" of this EP, longer and more epic than the heavy rest of the offering. After a haunting one-minute intro, the remaining 6 minutes has the band's thrashy melodic metalcore reminiscent of Ascendancy, with a more cinematic progressive structure. It's the perfect emotional storm! Oh, and I would like to note that based on the different keys that are out of the E-flat/drop D-flat/7-string B-flat/drop A-flat tuning range, this may be the first ever Trivium track in D tuning (not drop D, standard D) (in my theory). So many surprises in that towering track that are easy to remember!
Struck Dead shows the band looking back at the past while preparing for the future. It also fits well as a farewell to Alex Bent and his drumming fire. His replacement, the previous unavailable Alex Rudinger (Revocation, Monuments, Whitechapel, Light the Torch, Threat Signal, Intronaut, etc.) will make the band destined for a brand-new more technical era. In the meantime, this 18-minute EP has brought their heavy memorable sound back on top. Their talents are unforgettable!
Favorites: "Bury Me With My Screams", "Six Walls Surround Me"
Full disclosure, Blessthefall are not my cup of tea when it comes to metalcore. When I was growing up with the genre, I stayed closer to the groovier side of the genre with bands like Trivium, All That Remains and Shadows Fall rather than the more scene side. A lot of these bands gained prominence during the 2010s while I was in university, during my metal purge. GALLOWS by Blessthefall certainly feels nostalgic for that time frame of bands like Silverstien and Pierce the Veil. And you know what? For a pretty short piece of run-of-the-mill 2010s metalcore slop, it actually isn't that bad.
I enjoy how songs like "Venom" and "Y.S.A.B." aren't totally generic buildups/breakdowns and choruses within this subsect of mainstream metalcore. The choruses themselves can be quite catchy like "Wake the Dead" and "Light the Flame", provided you can tolerate Beau Bokan's vocal timbre, both in his screaming and singing. The foundations are extra djent-y and sound like a lot of fun, especially the occasional melo death riff that sneaks it way in between the palm muted riffage. And the record does not become too redundant all at once. Guest features from Story of the Year on "Fell So Hard, Felt So Right" and Alpha Wolf on "Drag Me Under" break up the early runs of similar sounding key centers and tempos. While the closer "This Ends With Us" has some decent brooding to wrap up the record.
I mean, it's hard for me to not enjoy GALLOWS from Blessthefall. Yeah I doubt it will end up in my year end rotation for 2025, and the record has a couple of duds, but the few moments that stand out are a shining example for the target audience of a time once passed. For a style of music that I don't frequent/enjoy very often, this one caught me off guard.
Best Songs: Wake the Dead, Drag Me Under, Light the Flame
Some discoveries may have an interesting backstory from my perspective. When this Ten After Two album was added to the site, I realized that its cover art is a lot similar to that of Bullet for My Valentine's Fever. They both have the same "bobcut hand-bra girl" image! Coincidence? Rip-off?!? I have no idea, but it made me up to checking out this album, which is good but somewhat generic...
Ten After Two first entered the scene with their EP If You Don't First released the prior year. The scene being "Risecore", referring to Rise Records bands that blend heavy breakdowns with clean choruses. In their only album to date Truth Is..., they take those aspects and crank them up a notch.
The beginning track "Yes" has what to expect from Risecore. Hardcore screams and falsetto cleans fill the track up to the brim. Although the riffing is interesting, that's not really an opening song to remember. Then "Before You Know It", this second track dominates further. The cleans are increased and in a good way. The vocalist has fantastic range in both his singing and screaming. The guitars are worth hearing for all their technicality to balance out with the breakdowns. "Dead After Dallas" continues the well-done vocals. Sadly, it's brought down by the sh*tty lyrics. Yeah, 80% of those lyrics are pretty bad. I would like that track more if it had an instrumental version. "Satan's Slumber Party" is heavier and has much better lyrics, "I've never felt so alone or so alive, I call this one my favorite strain, the ambulance showed up too late".
Bring the pace back up further is "Anxious". It's a quick heavy track right from the intro, soon leading to a catchy chorus and a haunting synth-infused breakdown. "Well, Oh Well" is also good yet losing the earlier heavy energy. Really making up for the album's mistakes is the title track which is the best highlight here. Everything is done perfectly in the guitars, lyrics, and chorus. The absolute pinnacle of the album, and that's my true opinion! An interesting track follows, the accurately titled "Interlude in D Minor". Just some eerie guitar with background noise, which is fine but not interesting.
The awesome "The Awe Song" is another one of the best tracks here. But then it leads to another one of the worst, "A Sight at Sea". It's just clean pop-ish filler sh*t that sounds bad in both the music and lyrics. Now I'm wishing this album would be over, in case another f***-up comes on. Fortunately, the closing track "Believe Me" isn't that. More of a scream-less power ballad starting with soft piano, but it's done in a way that pleasantly surprises me. Still not really the best though.
This young band (and I mean YOUNG, they were in their late teens) have made good effort in this album, despite the g****mn generic filler. It's too bad they split up after this album, but can there be more potential if they reform in the future?! That would be great! But I guess the truth will remain out there....
Favorites: "Before You Know It", "Satan's Slumber Party", "Anxious", "Truth Is...", "The Awe Song"
The melodeath stuff on Heimat is not too bad for a band that has been doing it for almost twenty-five years, but the metalcore elements are overly forced and take away whatever momentum those songs may have. I was expecting a bit more of a progressive pivot after the first track "War Is the Father of All", but instead, Heimat just kind of treads its feet along the dirt road and becomes quite predictable. Luckily, Heaven Shall Burn know how to properly mix a bass on this album, so even though the grooving is forgettable, at least it drives. The crustiness in the percussion gives the record some old school death metal appeal, but that's about it. "A Silent Guard" is the only saving grace near the albums conclusion.
Best Songs: A Silent Guard, My Revocation of Compliance, A Whisper from Above
Until now, the only band to have 4 releases with 5-star ratings from me in a row was Kamelot. And now, another band has joined in from the extreme side of the symphonic metal spectrum, Lorna Shore! 3 years after their previous album Pain Remains, the masters of symphonic deathcore are back with their new album I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me, continuing the sound that made them popular while adding in some surprises to keep things exciting.
The new album really is similar to Pain Remains. Elitists can put their hand down though, because as I've said just now, there are some fantastic surprises that not even Pain Remains has, which we'll get to as the review goes on. The album doesn't have a multi-track suite like that of Pain Remains, let alone have it released alongside 3 singles. Less singles, more anticipation, am I right? And guess what, there are more songs that have no breakdowns! As much as I like breakdowns, it's nice to not hear them in nearly every song. Those songs without breakdowns end up sounding closer to straight-up extreme symphonic metal, so I don't mind this album sitting in The Guardians.
For the songs with breakdowns, the track with the best one is the opening "Prison of Flesh", which is a grand rollercoaster ride through stampeding deathcore. A killer way to start this offering! With their next track and first single "Oblivion", I enjoy the music that throws back to 5 years ago in the Immortal era, along with the lyrics growled by Will Ramos. Another epic highlight! The first of the 3 tracks without breakdowns is "In Darkness", which is almost like their attempt at combining the title track of And I Return to Nothingness and one of my favorite Mechina songs "Anagenesis", including the double key-change final chorus of the former but excluding the clean singing and cyber synths of the latter. It still can't beat those two tracks though.
Speaking of the title track of And I Return to Nothingness, "Unbreakable" has the potential to surpass that as my new ultimate favorite Lorna Shore track (a couple other songs later on would take that throne, keep reading). Lots of Parkway Drive-like melody, and the lyrics are so motivational, "And after it all, our hearts are invincible, like diamonds we glow, WE ARE UNBREAKABLE!!!!" However, its throne is stolen by the next track "Glenwood" (again there's another track lurking in the shadows to take that throne). Absolutely epic and emotional, and with the lack of breakdowns, this is really extreme power-ish symphonic metal, enough to make a genuine Guardians track. More of those heartful melodies appear in "Lionheart". The melody and occasional choir adds to its uniqueness, and the breakdown is never out of place. The anthemic "Death Can Take Me" has the blackened vibe of Mental Cruelty's new album Zwielicht, while ending with another one of the most crushing breakdowns in Lorna Shore's career.
"War Machine" is another standout and a different one at that. The tempo is slowed slightly for just full-on deathly groove-thrash that can fit well in a video game like DOOM Eternal and Metal Hellsinger, especially with its "f*** enemies up" attitude. So different yet so wild! Increasing the synth orchestration is "A Nameless Hymn". It's generally Lorna Shore's take on the symphonic black metal of Dimmu Borgir and later Behemoth, though a little too pompous. At least the skillful soloing and breakdown compels me. And now comes the true ultimate best track of this album and possibly by the band, the glorious finale "Forevermore", their longest track at nearly 10 minutes, a tear-jerking atmospheric epic of triumph and emotion. Probably the best symphonic deathcore closing track EVER!!! I'm not gonna put it into words, just listen to it to believe me.
And now this masterpiece album is over, so what can we take away from it? Well, they don't make a complete turn back into their earlier sound, nor did they make an all-out Pain Remains clone. They've just taken the best of those eras and added a few new things like that one different heavier track. In their perfect 2020s melodic symphonic blackened deathcore era, I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me might just be the best of the best. Extreme vocals, drumming machinery, blazing guitars, booming bass, and cinematic orchestration make a recipe of unbreakable epicness. And I'm grateful that something like this can be heard all over the world!
Favorites: "Prison of Flesh", "Oblivion", "Unbreakable", "Glenwood", "Death Can Take Me", "War Machine", "Forevermore"
OK, this is a kind of an odd release. I guess the rather short length for this split EP is one thing, with an average two and a half minute length per song. But when two different sounding bands come together to make this release, it can cause some confusion within the clans.
Cream Abdul Babar is more of an experimental noisecore band, edging in on sludge and add in some keys and horns, as evident in "Mahogany-Walled Executive Officer". The amount of experimentation and discordant rhythm makes them sound like a mix of Dog Fashion Disco and Today is the Day. It's not super bad though, unlike the next track... "Intruder Alert" is a 4-minute waste of time, with nothing but looped synth distortion. That band is certainly not a winner for me with that ear-f***ing sh*t.
Teen Cthulthu is a much better deal here, combining metalcore with symphonic black metal, before early Abigail Williams and Dance Club Massacre made it cool, exemplified greatly in "Astral Black". The following track "Crystal Castles" has more black metal than the previous track, with a melodic ending. "Xcalibr8" is another sh*tter though. It seems way too short at just one minute, and the hard-to-decipher-without-reading lyrics make a cheesy poem that a popstar could write. But I still enjoy those other two kick-A tracks on this side of the EP.
The cover art makes good usage of outer colors despite the image being distorted which brings its quality down to as much as that release itself. I'm really not sure how they made art much lower quality than those low-effort blackgaze album covers these days. And it doesn't change my opinion on this EP. It's an OK try with two great tracks by Teen Cthulhu. But the rest, particularly the Cream Abdul Babar side of the EP, thumbs down....
Favorites (only two tracks I like by Teen Cthulhu): "Astral Black", "Crystal Castles"
If you look in my Spotify playlists, you’ll find one titled “Workouts”. Fittingly I use this for my kettlebell and free weight exercise sessions, and I would say approx. 80% of the content is deathcore or metalcore. This is something of a revelation for someone who up until around three years ago had heard virtually zero of such music, in fact I had intentionally looked to avoid it for most of the two sub-genre’s existence. Whilst this by no means makes me an expert on such styles of metal, I figure that I am at a reasonable enough level of maturity with this music to pass the occasional comment on The Revolution clan feature release.
As Blood Runs Back have a sound that I instantly find jarring as they deploy that djenty style of riffing that reverberates throughout the track and then there’s the big bloopy and mathy leads that run riot over proceedings. ‘Hesper Prynne’ has the makings of great Meshuggah worship but blows it by just piling more things on top of one another. This track is then followed by instrumental track ‘Pouring Reign’ which just feels like pointless musings really. By this point I am missing some of the big, rhythmic riffs that I use to fuel my workouts. What constitutes as breakdowns here (and I genuinely like a good breakdown) feels just more like a fake slowing of the pace where something else happens. There are moments like on ‘The Brighter Side of Suffering’ when the album sounds a little more on point than on other occasions, but this is still a bit too tame for me.
For me, As Blood Runs Black lack cohesion, bobbing around a little too much on the waves of their own farts in the bath water. I am aware as I type this that I am commenting on a scene that I do not entirely understand and so I am trying not to sound disingenuous to what I am listening to. To put it in grown up terms, the record is too melodic and lacks consistent punch. Tracks such as ‘Beneath the Surface’ start off with such promise but soon end up sounding more or less like every other track on the record and after a while (a short while), this just grates on me.
I've mentioned on a handful of occasions that I struggled with Sumerian Records back in the day. Djentcore was in its early stages of development and this record label was destined to pump out as many metalcore and djent bands as they possibly could through the early 2010s. Born of Osiris were just another one of the fairly unoriginal bands of the time, but as the years pass they modulate closer to the Veil of Maya sound. I've personally never cared for them, but as an inoffensive modern metalcore/deathcore/djent band, I cannot admit to ever switching the channel when they come on. A large reason for that was the songwriting, which was short and direct to the listener.
Short projects like The New Reign and The Simulation play into the groups strengths as being fat-free, straight-to-the-point metalcore/deathcore. Albums like Angel or Alien and more recently, Through Shadows on the other hand, are too long and drawn out for the band. Promotional singles like "Elevate" and "In Desolation" have decent ideas, but both feel cut short; "Elevate" and the opener "Seppuku" in particular feel like their final chorus is missing.
If this was a normal, formative Born of Osiris album, I probably would not mind as much. But in 2025, Through Shadows is a hair under fifty minutes in length. Combining that with shorter than average songs makes for a major issue in the structure of this release. When the band experiments with longer song structures like "A Mind Short Circuiting" and "Transcendence" it feels like two separate song ideas stitched together. The record is just not that well meshed and a large portion of that might come from the bands continued pivot towards electronica.
At the least the sound is nice. Since Born of Osiris are from that formative djent era, Through Shadows is super groovy. The percussion is precise and compliments the vocals very well as well as the occasional guitar lead. I did not find the guitar/bass work to be very impressive; this definitely still has that Sumerian blockiness to it. And vocals are mostly okay; Ronnie continues to move away from harsh screaming as frequently and they can be hit-or-miss, but I do appreciate how not every track on this record has a sung chorus.
Overall I found Through Shadows to be a fairly inoffensive album, just like the rest of Born of Osiris' discography. They are certainly talented when it comes to writing killer grooves and the occasional catchy hook, but given the albums length and continued push towards the progressive leaves this band in an odd predicament. Singles bands can be fine in small doses, but as far as I can tell, Born of Osiris are still chasing the shadows of Veil of Maya.
Best Songs: Inverno, Activated, Blackwater
Unforgivable vocals ruin this. Look, I love extreme vocals. I love death growls, I like Black Metal shrieks, I love Thrash yells, all that good jaunt. And even classically “bad” vocals don’t bother me much. I’ve got a pretty high tolerance for that stuff as someone who listens to more than a handful of Metal bands where one of the musicians basically bit the bullet and did the vocals despite not being able to sing at all. I mean hell, I even enjoy J-Pop/Denpa/Idol music where the singers can’t actually sing at all and rely on autotune and their cute aesthetic to get by. Really, it usually doesn’t bother me.
The abrasiveness of these vocals goes beyond offensively bad, into essentially unlistenable, to the point the music around it suffers immensely. There’s some sort of distortion/static effect on most of them which makes them even worse. The crazy thing? The vocalist employs more than one technique, and they suck at ALL of them. The shrill screams are terrible, the punky yelling is terrible, the sassy vocals are terrible, the “singing” if you can call it that is poor, the only thing passable the vocalist does is the monotonous droning style used on “Phoenix in Flight.” Which still isn’t good, but it’s inoffensive.
I originally wanted to read the lyrics along while listening to see what it was about. Gave up halfway into the first song as the vocalist does not even make the most basic attempt to enunciate a single word. Right from the first line, you are immediately lost, as the noises the vocalist screams don’t sound like even one word in the verse. I will never know whether they are good or not because the vocalist put zero effort into delivering them.
Oh, the music? Maybe I’d have more to say about it if I wasn’t distracted by how awful the vocals are the whole time. It’s competently played and written, even above average for the genres employed most of the time. There are some genuinely great moments scattered about, usually when the band leans more into crafting riffs and chord progressions as opposed to being as mathy and chaotic as possible. “Heaven in Her Arms” has some awesome riffs and chords that walk the fine line between melodic and dissonant, aforementioned “Phoenix in Flight” has nice doomy atmosphere, and the Post-Metal style buildup of the closer is pretty great. The drumming is consistently excellent, and probably the one aspect of it I have nothing but praise for. Not only technically impressive and complex, but also packed with variety, and simpler sections that serve the music rather than being too preoccupied with chaos and showing off.
I’m not going to lie though – even with the perfect vocalist, this album would only be “good” to me. Most of it is too chaotic and angular for my taste. A shame though, I think I would have enjoyed the lyrics and concept. At the end of the day it’s just not for me.
Well, after a marathon of reviewing Guardians classics, it's time to balance out my palate with something a lot darker and heavier. I encountered this Killwhitneydead album in a video the other day and decided to give it a shot. And compared to the other release I've reviewed, the debut Inhaling the Breath of a Bullet... WHAT THE F*** HAPPENED?!?
Killwhitneydead really went downhill in their second release Never Good Enough for You. The album cover of blood and nudity is bad enough, but for the music itself... There are still many samples used just like Inhaling the Breath of a Bullet. What made that EP acceptable was that release's length, which made the amount of samples still the same yet acceptable. When this music/sample alternation goes on for a half-hour, it gets boring and makes you wonder why the band has never been sued for the samples. The growls and riffing don't sound all that great, particularly when there could've been blasts where there are barely any. A few breakdowns are quite good though...
"You Will Get Exactly What You Deserve (and Not One Bullet Less)" gives me something special, a brutal breakdown similar to early Job for a Cowboy. "She Didn't Look Like She Had a Disease" is only one more track I like, and what a surprise! Several other tracks have melodeath leads, but here they go full-on power metal/grind/deathcore, with some clean falsetto singing! Who knew that was even a thing?! As for the rest, it sounds too flat. This sh*t is never good enough for me or anyone....
Favorites (only tracks I even slightly like): "You Will Get Exactly What You Deserve (and Not One Bullet Less)", "She Didn't Look Like She Had a Disease"
Not really a deathcore guy, not really a nu metal guy, so this "nu metalcore" that Wikipedia apparently has an article for doesn't really appeal to me beyond the fact that it's metal. I checked out Slaughter to Prevail for a coworker and I politely told him that it was better than most of the deathcore I've heard, which isn't really untrue. But it's only OK. I didn't really expect much of a change when I heard about the new album. But to be fair, each song had little tricks here and there that I appreciated. Good portions of each song were built on these little tricks basically being major focal points. Unfortunately, none of these aspects were really strong enough to differentiate this album from the vast majority of deathcore in the longrun. Basically, this album manages to be catchy and edgy enough to get by on its own, with little amounts of creativity making it better than all the other generic nu metal and deathcore albums, but not a groundbreaker by any definition.
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Today I decided to check out more release by Spitfire. The Slideshow Whiplash is an EP the band made two years after their debut album Dead Next Door and just one year before their first hiatus. I wasn't expecting a short EP to be slightly better than that debut, but that's certainly the case here! Most of the tracks in this album are in the same quality as the better half of the debut...
Well, there are only 4 tracks, and one of them is an instrumental. Still this is for any metalcore/mathcore listener and you may enjoy it once you try it. And if you haven't heard that debut yet, this EP shall make you up for that.
"This Ain't Vegas and You Ain't Elvis" (sounds like what a casino owner outside of Vegas would say to an Elvis impersonator) has awesome strength in the lyrics. "Bulletproof and Tall as Jesus" is the best highlight of this release, and it's too perfect for me to put into words. It segues to the title interlude with is an odd mix of techno and jazz. Then the EP ends with the brutal "Heroin". Vocalist Jon Spencer sounds a little drunk in his attempt at cleans, but the rest of the track is nice and heavy.
I love most of what this band has in this EP. Nothing disappoints me, and this has better pointage than their debut Dead Next Door. The only things I would remove or improve are the title interlude and the weird clean section in the last track. If this was their way of saying farewell before their first hiatus, they've done it well....
Favorites: "This Ain't Vegas and You Ain't Elvis", "Bulletproof and Tall as Jesus"
Exploring different releases in your favorite metal genres is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you're gonna get. Some might be bad, some might be OK, some might be so awesome that you're kicking yourself for not discovering them sooner. That 3rd outcome is certainly the case for me with this early metalcore/hardcore gem!
In the 90s, hardcore and early metalcore weren't always "that emo-fueled genre with breakdowns". Snapcase was formed in 1989 and released their debut Lookinglasself (what's that, an elf character in one of those Alice stories?) in 1993. Their hardcore sound would eventually make its true form in one of the best albums of the genre, Progression Through Unlearning. Straight-on hardcore/metalcore before their switch to post-hardcore/alt-metal in subsequent albums.
"Caboose" is the perfect anthem to start the album. Vocalist Darryl Taberski unleashes his screaming power with full intensity. I appreciate the work the band has put in their songs. The lyrics are clear and empowering, without any incohesive rambling. That's what makes this album the energetic masterpiece it is! That along with the furious "Guilt By Ignorance". It is followed by another great track, "Harrison Bergeron". Then we have another priceless classic in "Priceless". That's what metalcore sounds like before the dance-trancecore of Enter Shikari, the pop-ish melody of A Day to Remember, the heaviness of Fit for a King, and the djent of Periphery.
"Zombie Prescription" is amazing in the vocals, guitars, and drums, along with a well-placed uncommon breakdown. "Killing Yourself To Live" really kicks a**! It greatly exemplifies this early metalcore era. "She Suffocates" punches through frantic riffing and time signature changes, accomplishing a lot in under 3 minutes.
"Weak Tyrant" isn't the strongest track of the album but it still rules and maintains the perfect 5-star rating. The more hardcore listeners would know "Vent" quite well, which can easily get the live crowd rolling. "Breaking and Reaching" is a grand 4-minute standout, with some of the most superb music and lyrics in the album. The "Outro" seems like a nice way out. Apparently, the audio sample is from Pee-Wee Herman. RIP Paul Reubens...
I would probably ask for a little more diversity, but there's practically nothing to change about Progression Through Unlearning. Hardcore's energetic spirit is something that has rarely been replicated in today's scene. Snapcase would drop their earlier roots for subsequent albums. Still if you want true energy entering your mind, listen and learn!
Favorites: "Caboose", "Priceless", "Killing Yourself To Live", "She Suffocates", "Breaking and Reaching"
Madness is what you can expect in any noise-ridden math/metalcore release. Songs can range from short to radio-sized and have at least one long-ish epic. Spitfire's debut Dead Next Door may be at the same quality level as Nora's Loser's Intuition, but the mathcore part of the sound is slightly more...
It's not just pure math/metalcore that I often hear in this album. Occasionally, there's a slight touch of alt-rock/grunge. One might call this band a more hardcore Nirvana. But why should that be what we would know them as? Clearly, noise-fueled metalcore is their goal. Oh, and I just realized that this band isn't related to one of the earliest (and worst) mathcore bands out there, Nineironspitfire. Spitfire's debut is by far better than Nineironspitfire's sole release, so let's check it out.
"Please Don't Go Out Tonight", especially not in my country when it will soon be Hungry Ghost Month as of this review! But seriously, that song is a great start that shouldn't be overlooked. Not as great as the interesting highlight "The Two Forty Eight Lie" with its different tempo changes from fast hardcore to slow sludge. There's plenty of chaos in "Render Quench Create". Unfortunately, it doesn't have much focus and tears apart the album's greatness. "Marasmus" is around to make up for that with some of the more hardcore riffing to occur in this album.
"A Glance at Quintenessence" I consider one of the most quintessential songs in early math/metalcore, with Rosetta-esque sludgy tempo. "Good Cop, Bad Cop" is another one of my favorites, long with fast riffs especially at the end. "All Indentured Lovables" is a beautiful interlude while keeping listeners on their seats with heaviness at the end.
"The Burgundy Room" ends up marking the album's descent back into the sh*tty quality of the 3rd track. The bass and drums ruin the band's intention of bringing together hardcore and metal. "What Ever Happened to the Indie Queen" has some nice mathcore, but that kind of sound is better executed by Ion Dissonance. "DJ Jazzy Steve" is a strange closing track, even for me. Jazzy Steve, whoever you are, cut that sh*t out please.
Dead Next Door isn't your typical hardcore album. It has the noise and chaos of any math-metalcore album. I would enjoy and appreciate this more if not for a couple poor tracks including that d*mn remix-ish track at the end. As much as I like all this beauty and brutality, it would take a little more improvement to make this grab my attention....
Favorites: "The Two Forty Eight Lie", "Marasmus", "A Glance at Quintenessence", "Good Cop, Bad Cop", "All Indentured Lovables"
F***ing h*ll, how did this masterpiece hide under my metalcore radar!? The Opposite of December is the debut album by Poison the Well and has greatly defined the genre! It's a heavy emotional offering of glory that fans of hardcore and metal shouldn't miss out in their lives.
Not often can you find something that can sound so fresh even after over 25 years following its release. As awesome as many other metalcore releases, they would be bowing down to the true groundbreaking developing albums of the genre. The title and release date fit well together, considering it was released in December 1999, one month before the new millennium (unless you wanna be technical). Already there was hope for a promising future for metal and hardcore in this millennium.
Already hitting things hard is the opening track "12-23-93" (I wonder what that date means). After the beginning drum roll by Chris Hornbrook, there's a lot of fury from the guitar and vocals. Jeffrey Moreira has wonderful vocals as he screams well-written lyrics at the top of his lungs. Not a lot of metalcore vocalists have the same rage as Jeffrey, and that's probably good health-wise. That, along with active smoking and when he used his screaming offstage after finding out the band's equipment was stolen, would lead to him suffering a collapsed lung, but he recovered. Anyway, he also does some clean singing that helps the band standout among other early metalcore bands. His vocals also shine greatly in "A Wish for Wings That Work", with a spoken bridge. Closing the next track "Artist's Rendering of Me" is some emotional guitar and bass.
Then the bass becomes audible in the bridge of "Slice Paper Wrists", a melodic standout for many metalcore listeners, and I truly agree. "Nerdy" has more special relatable lyrics about wanting to take a friendship to the next level. Jeffrey's lyrics are truly beyond the kind of scenario I would ever write. "To Mandate Heaven" takes on a more experimental side of things that would increase in later albums. The metallic riffing is covered in raw filth compared to other tracks. The experimentation pays off and naturally, they've made another powerful anthem.
"Not Within Arms Length" marks another dynamic highlight. The bass and drums are more relentless and take the spotlight above the riffing. It sounds quite fresh and never loses any steam. "Mid Air Love Message" plays around with rock riffing for a lighter vibe. The heaviness is still there as a counterweight for the slower emotion. After a hidden section between tracks, "My Mirror No Longer Reflects" closes the album with some of the most emotional guitarwork in late 90s metalcore.
All in all, The Opposite of December is just what every metalcore fan really needs. Something so beautiful and brutal was made by this young talented group that would stand the test of time. This impactful gem is essential for all metal/hardcore fans, one that you can't go your entire life without!
Favorites: "12/23/93", "Slice Paper Wrists", "To Mandate Heaven", "Not Within Arms Length", "My Mirror No Longer Reflects"
Nora, named after Samantha Mathis' character in Pump Up the Volume, was formed in 1996 and released a few EPs including a split EP with The Dillinger Escape Plan. I checked out one of those EPs Theneverendingyouline a couple years ago in which the strained vocals by Carl Severson made it unbearable. On the debut full-length album Loser's Intuition, while the style hasn't changed too much, the members' talent and writing has improved, and luckily that includes Severson. No more of that strained sh*t...
This album can still be considered math-metalcore, but the mathcore side has been toned down some in favor of the metallic hardcore of Hatebreed and Earth Crisis. It's all about performing loud and heavy, nothing dramatic. The powerful groove of metal/hardcore is unleashed!
The album starts off greatly with "Wave Goodbye". The band fires away with riffs and breakdowns without ever sounding as repetitive as that EP. "My Bloody Clownsuit" follows as another killer track. "Warthog" has heavy rhythms to please my ears, especially at the end. Then we have another highlight in "Bring It". The band continue to bring their math-metalcore sound with a dash of melody from Undying.
"Nobody Takes Pictures of the Drummer" is another pummeling track, starting off with mid-paced dissonance before some vicious hardcore speed. You gotta appreciate the drumwork Chris Ross, despite nobody taking pictures of him. Then we have "For the Travelers" which is one of the heaviest anthems I've heard from this band. The riffs and tempo practically shapeshift into different forms, even slowing down for the dark effects of Godflesh. Indeed for the metalcore travelers! Now "what about standing up" for "Leadpipe Moment" with its really powerful bellows from Severson!
The title track is where the band starts to lose some steam, but it proves that good metalcore doesn't have to be from later modern bands like Northlane and Like Moths to Flames. "Mudmonster" is another d*mn killer highlight, as drilling as that cover art by Derek Hess. "Kill You for a Dollar" I'm guessing is a re-recording from one of their EPs. The more mathy side there might've been the spark for Iwrestledabearonce later on. However, I feel like it could've been better if it was longer than just under two minutes.
Loser's Intuition is a lot more worth your money than Theneverendingyouline, with better improved talent from the band members. With that said, I should warn newcomers about the chaos that would occur. This offering is good for the experienced....
Favorites: "Wave Goodbye", "Bring It", "Nobody Takes Pictures of the Drummer", "For the Travelers", "Mudmonster"
Metalcore fans who listen to bands like Killswitch Engage and Shadows Fall probably don't know about the bands those members were originally in before those fans (including myself) were born. The members of Overcast include Killswitch Engage bassist Mike D'Antonio and Shadows Fall vocalist "male metalcore Rapunzel" Brian Fair. After an 8-year breakup due to lack of the success their peers had, they've reformed and started recording a new album...
Reborn to Kill Again is actually mostly a re-recording album of many of the songs in their first two albums Expectational Dilusion and Fight Ambition to Kill. And of those 13 tracks (14 if including the European bonus track), only one song is brand-new, and one other song is from a different band. A look back into the past, I'd say!
The first track is a two-parter, "Diluting Inertia / Grifter". Now that's how you time-travel into 90s hardcore/metalcore! Thundering riffs and rhythms continue in "Root Bound Apollo". And yes, it's that song that was meant to be for Overcast's then-shelved 3rd album and ended up in Shadows Fall's album Of One Blood. It still remains one of my favorite early-ish metalcore songs with a fast searing Metallica-like solo, alongside the thrashy riffing and vocals. Things slow down in "Seven Ft. Grin" (that's a h*ll of a long grin), as the vocals sound tough and the guitars have heavier layers added. "Filter of Syntax" is kind of a filler track, but it might remind some of Snapcase. The brand-new title track is a strange one, sounding more alternative. If they had a chance to make a 4th album, I hope they go their earlier direction, not like that new track.
Another two-part track, "As a Whole / Two Degrees Below", is a 7 and a half minute epic with a long intro, just like Aftershock's "Prelude to Forever". As a whole, that Overcast epic makes another solid highlight, but it doesn't have the glory of the Aftershock one. "Spun" spins into gang vocals, guitar soloing, and Pantera-esque breakdowns. The destructive "Your (Destructive) Self" has some vocals to remind some of Merauder, and they help with hardcore's lyrical commentary. "For Indifference" is another one of my favorites here. I can't believe how indifferent some people are nostalgia-inducing tracks like that!
We then get an instrumental, "Styrofoam Kill Machine". It probably would've been better with vocals, but it's still quite killer. It's followed by another favorite of mine, "Fates Design". Then "Apocalypse Upon Us" goes dark and lurking without ever reaching the deathcore depths of Winds of Plague. Finally, "Bleed Into One" is one of the earliest songs by the band, the title track of their first demo released in 1992. The gang vocals alongside Fair's yells have a similar vibe the Rollins Band album The End of Silence.
Reborn to Kill Again is for both new fans of metalcore (including myself) looking for older treasures and earlier fans wanting to relive their hardcore memories. If you're wondering where the bridge is between Integrity and Shadows Fall, here it is. A great break from today's heavily modernized metalcore market....
Favorites: "Diluting Inertia / Grifter", "Root Bound Apollo", "As a Whole / Two Degrees Below", "Your (Destructive) Self", "For Indifference", "Fates Design", "Bleed Into One"
So as we all know, Killswitch Engage and Shadows Fall are the two Massachusetts leading conquerors of the melodic metalcore scene. However, there were two other bands formed earlier by those two bands' members; Aftershock and Overcast. I don't wanna waste time listing every single associated member, but I will list the ones in this album as the review goes on. Boston, the city the Dropkick Murphys are shipping up to, was already shaping up its hardcore scene at this point before receiving a metal injection right before the new millennium dropped. The band that included future Killswitch Engage guitarists Adam Dutkiewicz and Joel Stroetzel recorded and released their second album Through the Looking Glass in 1999, around the same time as another one of the best releases in early melodic metalcore, Prayer for Cleansing's Rain in Endless Fall. While this Aftershock album isn't perfect, it's amazing and essential for metalcore fans to listen to and dropkick some a**!
Through the Looking Glass is a solid offering with all you really need in metalcore within the riffs, leads, drums, breakdowns, and vocals. Everything's so dissonant and diverse, and while there isn't the technical heaviness later metalcore bands would have, it's a strong album to remember. The lyrics and titles seem to center around the adventures of a young girl in Wonderland named Alice (if you know, you know), setting aside the wonderful fantasy for the dark reality hidden beneath.
It's not often a metalcore album starts with a 7 and a half minute epic, but here we are in "Prelude to Forever". Ambient feedback rises before a couple minutes of heavy sludgy riffing and drumming. So basically, the first third of the song is an instrumental. As the vocals come in, the tempo in the riffing slowly increases from mid-tempo to finally reaching a punky thrash pace. Incredible! This is early groove-ish metalcore at its finest, sounding quite heavy without ever having to resort low djent tunings. Fast riffing, catchy hooks, and deathly breakdowns, all in the moderately heavy drop C tuning. What more can you ask for in metalcore? The ambient title interlude is simple yet dark, with some angelic choir. There's more of that atmosphere to end "Jabberwocky" after the song itself progresses through heaviness.
"Traversing the Gap" takes on some deathly tremolos. As with many metalcore/melodic metalcore bands in the late 90s and 2000s, Aftershock leans into melodeath territory and takes the genre's powerful riffing without making it super melodic. "Living Backwards" is more phenomenal, as the bass and drums have a stomping groove aligned with grim leads and chords. Notice I said this album isn't totally perfect in the first paragraph because of the slightly flawed "Impenetrability". It's a mid-paced heavy track, but the drumming sounds oddly timed and the leads sound too screechy. I prefer hearing those kinds of leads from Meshuggah. There's also some clean singing which isn't too bad.
We also have some thunderous riff rampage in "My Own Invention". Some of the more deathly drum blasts occur though a little heavy on the cymbals. Kicking off "Infinite Conclusion" is some start-stop riffing that is a little choppy, but the enjoyable chords made me forget about that. However, that doesn't stop the vocals falling behind the music. I understand if some steam is lost. The outro "Awaking the Dream" is a nice light way to end.
Aftershock was an early developing band of metalcore with not as much recognition as their still enjoyable peers in Killswitch Engage and Shadows Fall. Nonetheless, I can enjoy this band's focus on pummeling heaviness as much as those other two bands' catchy melody. Aftershock and Overcast both provided the spark needed for one of metal's most popular genres in the modern era. Remember, Aftershock was Adam Dutkiewicz and Joel Stroetzel's band that would lead them to their more famous one, and you already know what it is. Small reduction of technical heaviness aside, Through the Looking Glass is a truly cohesive experience. One that metalcore fans should own!
Favorites: "Prelude to Forever", "Jabberwocky", "Traversing the Gap", "Living Backwards", "My Own Invention"
I just can't stop thinking about the epic excellence of Hope for the Dying. I've mentioned that their album Legacy is their own Becoming the Archetype Terminate Damnation. This album, Aletheia, the one before that one, is actually what I would consider the symphonic missing link between that BTA album and the one from their early incarnation, The Remnant, even hinting at that band's early 2010s deathly era. Hope for the Dying can break the norms to make something wonderful. Similarly to Mechina's Siege, half the amount of songs each go over 8 minutes, and the last track is a 12-minute epic. And just because that's unusual doesn't mean there's anything wrong with it. Now let's pick up where Dissimulation left off and where Legacy would unfold...
With this album, Hope for the Dying has added more orchestral grandeur, enough for me to question why this isn't in The Guardians like Dissimulation. The lengthiness in many tracks comes from the different sections being quite long. It allows the instrumentation to really shine and help the band stand out in the metal and hardcore realms. Their move from the Strike First to Facedown was the right one, not just because it caused a boost in popularity but also Strike First's shutdown a year after this album's release. This diverse cauldron of influences has come from sounds heard in America and Europe, all in different eras. The epic orchestra might be a little too pompous in a few moments, but when they get it right, they get it WAY right! Also the stylistic associations with Becoming the Archetype are so clear that I'm surprised both of those bands have never shared members with each other. Although the name of this album is similar to former BTA guitarist Alex Kenis' main band Aletheian.
The opening track is the epic "Acceptance". You think starting an album with a nearly 10-minute epic is a rarity? Imagine also closing the album with two longer epics! But we'll get to those later on. Adding to this rarity is the high amount of instrumentation compared to the vocals, and this often-unsuccessful move actually ends up paying off, keeping me hooked through and through. A fantastic start to this journey! "Reformation" starts off heavy with the usual growls and screams letting out lyrics about uniting for war, "marching as one, the reformation has begun". The track overall sounds like War of Ages gone orchestral, especially when it's short and straight. "Iniquitous" kicks off with some European neoclassical shredding. Then the lyrics battle against false beliefs, "you almost believe the lies yourself". Lots of epic power despite being a short song!
"In Isolation" begins with what sounds like an Irish Jig, then the rest is their usual metal. The song was released as a single and has its own lyric video. Those lyrics and the music continue the spirit of Becoming the Archetype, leading up to a powerful climax towards the end, "I no longer wish to walk alone". Seriously, you should check that song out! Another example of depth comes in "Through a Nightmare Darkly", the title playing on the idea of seeing the face of God, yet twisting the image into a world of darkness and pain. Quite a poetic message to convey for a 5-minute instrumental track! It fits well conceptually when seguing to the next track "The Lost". The lyrics that maintain the message of the instrumental give passion and motivation to a lost generation, "this is a chance to rise". The great vocals of Josh Ditto ranging from screams to cleans gives him the vibe of Becoming the Archetype's two vocalists, Jason Wisdom and Seth Hecox.
We're heading to the final leg as we check out those longer epics, starting with "Visions". There's nothing new about this track, but it stays strong in the instrumentation and vocals that keep up the European-infused darkness. The cleans also sound similar to European metal vocalists to add diversity to the vocals covering American metalcore screams. A wonderful track for the patient and experienced! It segues to "Serenity", a serene interlude with lovely acoustic guitar. And finally, "Open Up the Sky", the closing epic that is the band's longest song at 12 and a half minutes. It's truly one of the most epic and innovative metal tracks I've heard in my life. Everything's so progressive with occasional hardcore bursts. You have to be really experienced musically and lyrics to understand it all. Then everything ends with distant piano. So legendary!
All in all, Aletheia is only for listeners who can handle metal, hardcore, epicness, and progressiveness all at once. And I am one of those listeners! If the orchestration wasn't too pompous though, I would've added that extra half-star needed for this album to be as perfect Dissimulation and Legacy. Still it is the kind of album you wouldn't typically expect in the modern era. If you can sit through an hour-long album with a few 10+ minute tracks with lots of heaviness and diversity, from beginning to end, you would certainly be one with the symphonic progressive metalcore world. And specifically, the world of Aletheia!
Favorites: "Acceptance", "Iniquitous", "In Isolation", "Visions", "Open Up the Sky"
As much as I enjoy symphonic deathcore, we really need more symphonic METALcore. Metalcore or melodic metalcore would really go well together with the epic orchestra of symphonic metal, and yet that almost never happens. It's always symphonic deathcore! DEATHcore!! DEATHCORE!!! Except for one of the most epic bands around...
Hope for the Dying's official full-length debut masterpiece Dissimulation is an album in which the "epic" label fits in quite appropriately. Before recording this album, the band made a self-titled release that was released as an EP then repackaged as a studio album released via Strike First Records. The band would then be signed to the label's more well-known older sibling Facedown Records. Just imagine Unearth and All That Remains with more progressive structures and Two Steps From Hell-esque orchestra.
The adventure begins with the intro "Exordium" which is the most Batman-sounding intro in a Revolution album besides Make Them Suffer's debut Neverbloom. Then to start the last third of the track, the metal guitars take the stage, rising from riffing to shredding. It makes the perfect transition to "Vacillation" with all its extreme technical speed. The screams and cleans are all in brilliant balance, already giving you all of this album's greatness to come. Then it all fades to orchestra and piano to get you ready for a heavy transition into the next track. "Orison" is another perfect flowing track. Note that all the tracks segue into one another similarly to BTBAM's Colors.
"Transcend" has that TSFH-sounding orchestra alongside some of the progressiveness of Queensryche gone heavier. The orchestra makes its bombastic flow through the heavy guitars, drums, and vocals. 4 and a half minutes in, a shredtastic solo is unleashed by slowing down in glistening melancholy. The sorrow bleeds into "Imminent War" starting with an acoustic intro before blasting into metal once again. "Perpetual Ruin" again has that "epic trailer music gone metalcore" motive.
And then we come to the glorious 15-minute 3-track suite, "The Awakening". Each one has different focus on an aspect, with the title track of the suite emphasizing the piano and strings, the title track of the album adding in some more shredding plus some female singing, and the third part "The Veil Lifted" closing the suite in both melancholy and progressiveness. The most vicious song of the album, "Vile Reflections" blasts away through metal yet again. Then it all ends with "Desirion", starting soft in the piano before the last bit of blasting metal gone orchestral and then wrapping things on a light symphonic note.
Dissimulation may not surpass Trivium's In Waves for the eternal reign of my personal best albums of 2011, but it's still one of the best that I wished I had discovered sooner. The older fans would get a kick of nostalgia while still sounding fresh the newer fans including myself. Orchestral metalcore is a sound that should've caught on a lot more. A must-have for anyone up for something both epic and extreme!
Favorites: "Vacillation", "Orison", "Transcend", "The Awakening" (full suite), "Vile Reflections"
Hope for the Dying has already made history with their self-titled debut EP/album being the first release for Facedown Records' imprint label Strike First since its relaunch. I enjoy this thrash-ish metalcore similar to Shogun-era Trivium and Facedown labelmates War of Ages, though not as much as their more symphonic subsequent albums...
I can understand the confusion of whether this would be considered an EP or a studio album, since it's just a 7-track 36-minute release. While the rhythms and vocals aren't as dynamic or aggressive as their later albums, there are killer shredtastic leads that would carry on into those albums. The riffing from the guitar duo James Houseman and Jack Daniels is also not totally emphasized which explains the reduction of heaviness in this particular release.
It starts with a killer standout in the 7-minute "City of Corpses". Then "A Beautiful Day for Vengeance" begins with one of the heaviest riffs in the release before more of that tasty shredding. It seems like the more slightly forgettable parts of this offering are the clean-sung sections like that of "Into Darkness We Ride".
Some of the best moments of "Our Fallen Comrades" occur in the second quarter of the track. You gotta hear it to believe it! "Where We Are Going We Don't Need Roads" (clearly a reference to the final line of the first Back to the Future movie) has some melodic instrumentation to remind me of We Came as Romans at that time. "Would the Angels Say" fiddles a little too much with the shredding. Then both the riffs and leads really shine as "In Loving Memory" opens.
Hope for the Dying's first release was a promising start to their career. However, the killer shredding would impress me more if the quality wasn't so on and off, though it's mostly on. At least it would pave the way to something more epic....
Favorites: "City of Corpses", "A Beautiful Day for Vengeance", "Our Fallen Comrades", "In Loving Memory"
It's quite a mystery how so many bands can pull off a genre well despite it losing the spark of interest it once had. Vildhjarta is one of the few ongoing bands that can still be considered a true pioneer of a genre nowadays. They started out in the djent scene of the early 2010s alongside Tesseract and Periphery, but stand out amongst them with their own djent subgenre thall. Their perfect legacy has spanned between their first two albums, staying loyal to their fans. And just under 4 years after their second album, their 3rd one Dar Skogen Sjunger Under Evighetens Granar (Swedish for "Where the Forest Sings Under the Eternal Spruce Trees") continues the gigantic brutal drama!
A few pre-release singles came out in the couple years before the album's release, and they continue to show their progressive stamina. Despite the remaining original member guitarist Daniel Bergstrom having left the band between songrwriting and recording, nothing has changed. In fact, this album has some of their heaviest work to date. Serene ambience gets crushed by a hailstorm of devastation.
"Byta Ut Alla Stjarnor Pa Himlen Mot Plustecken" (Replace All the Stars in the Sky with Plus Signs) plays around with some riffing in the intro, as the sun is darkened by an eclipse of downtuned guitar and bass, with the smog of brutality completely blocking out all light, similar to the Minecraft Betweenlands mod. The riffs and rhythms are both atmospheric and punishing. Melody only comes from the ambience. Everything else is an avalanche of heavy technical riffing. And there's more of that in "Tva Vackra Svanar" (Two Beautiful Swans), along with a brief moment of soft beauty in the middle. The end result is an experimental sludgy track like a more downtuned Will Haven. Then we get to a couple singles, starting with "Sargasso". The other single "Ylva" (Eleven) has some melodic ambience while focusing mainly on relentless guitars and drums.
"Dar Mossan Moter Havet" (Where the Moss Meets the Sea) has some progressiveness from Mechina and Protest the Hero without ever going as melodic as those bands. "Roda Lappar, Sota Applen" (Red Lips, Sweet Apples) barely has any sweetness, preferring to go all-out brutal similar to some of the more sludgy tracks by Every Time I Die and The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza. "Kristallfagel" (Crystalbird) masters the brilliant dreamy djent, while Vilhelm Bladin's vocals stay intense. "? Regnet, the ?" (The Rain, the) has some of the metalcore from God Forbid and Knocked Loose made even heavier and more sludgy.
"Hosten Som Togs Ifran Mig" (The Autumn That Was Taken From Me) has some slight vibes from Bleed from Within. "Viktlos & Evig" (Weightless & Eternal) builds up the mathy thall further, swinging through progressive intricacy and occasional cleans. "Stjarnblodning" (Starbleeding) has some Varials vibes bleeding out. The final track "Den Spanska Kanslan" (The Spanish Feeling) has unforgiving riffing throughout this glorious 7-minute epic before letting light shine again, albeit not as bright as it once was.
This skull-crushing offering Dar Skogen Sjunger Under Evighetens Granar is another irresistible album to look out for. It probably would've been perfect if the song titles weren't all in Swedish and having plus signs surrounding each one. Still this is true thall hellfire!
Favorites: "Tva Vackra Svanar", "Ylva", "Dar Mossan Moter Havet", "Kristallfagel", "Viktlos & Evig", "Den Spanska Kanslan"
As I believe I've explained before, symphonic blackened deathcore began in the late 2000s with early Abigail Williams and Winds of Plague and would eventually reach its height of popularity with bands like Lorna Shore and Worm Shepherd. Now can we replace the symphonics with Meshuggah-ish djent and elements of atmospheric doom? Humanity’s Last Breath has answered that question with a big fat YES. The band has continued their exploration into deeper darker caverns that has started with their debut!
The 3rd album Valde (Swedish for "Empire") is another towering part of the band's discography. It's as towering as the spirit-filled tower in the cover artwork and as bleak yet stunning as the artwork itself, as are many other works by that cover artist, the late Mariusz Lewandowski. RIP...
"Dodsdans" (Dance of Death) is the intro that hints at different D-words this album can be described as; dark, deathly, depressive, dissonant, downtuned, dynamic... Then it's the atmospheric yet punishing "Glutton". That song and "Earthless" shall make the most emotionless listener become emotional from this brutality. Next track "Descent" is more percussive alongside technical shredding. The occasional orchestra and choir makes things even more apocalyptic, especially in the black-doom-esque sections.
At the end of "Spectre" is a bit of melody that makes it sound like a Gojira track. Adding to that melody is the sparsely used clean singing, balancing that part with the rest of the song's intensity. Still firing away hard is "Dehumanize". Then "Hadean" continues the band's top-notch talent. The monstrous vocals by Filip Danielsson are incredible as always, flowing with the rhythm. At the same time, riffs are fired through by the guitar duo Buster Odeholm and Calle Thomer. From djenty deathcore breakdowns to drummer Klas Blomgren's blast beats, the violent quest for heaviness rolls on! "Tide" continues the riff-wrath while having the band's own epic post-sludge moment at the end.
The instrumental title track, actually spelled "Valdet" with a T at the end, expands on the atmosphere that then rises to another doom march. Bring things up on front, "Sirens" has more of that heavy stank with uncommon melody here and there. The guitar duo can nicely surprise us with their variety. "Futility" has more of the band's blackened djenty deathcore sound. "Vittring" (Weathering) is an absolutely heavy ending track. You just gotta praise those hammering drums, dissonant guitars, and furious vocals.
Valde proves that Humanity's Last Breath can put all their crushing talents into one plate. Massive brutality all around with some touches of melody. This isn't just thall, this is atmospheric black-doom-infused djenty deathcore thall. Not even the most metal of metalheads would know what the heaviest of all is until they try this one for size!
Favorites: "Earthless", "Spectre", "Hadean", "Tide", "Sirens", "Vittring"
In extreme metal's ongoing reign, many fans are at war for the throne. Their goal is to make the heaviest music known to man, tearing down the walls of conventionality for their original attempts at giving heaviness a new meaning. Humanity's Last Breath might the closest band to the finish line, stunning fans with some of the heaviest and most pulverizing breakdowns and riffs possible. Having already released 3 EPs and one album before this one, the talent and fury the band has is impenetrable and would have all those other extreme metal bands bowing down before them. That's how abyssal this album Abyssal is!
The band's ultra-heavy thall (more brutalized djent/deathcore) sound is so unique. It also leans into downtempo deathcore, the subgenre that might as well be considered death-doomcore and was developed by The Last Ten Seconds of Life and Black Tongue. Whichever genre Humanity's Last Breath are referred to, they increase the limits and impress even the most serious metalheads with their chaotic attack.
"Bursting Bowel of Tellus" literally bursts in with the opening riff, showing that the brutality hasn't withered away since their 2013 debut. There's no doubt those blasts and riff technicality will leave you stunned all the way up to the end. Next track "Bone Dust" has more of the intense violence from vocalist Filip Danielsson's whispers and growls. Everything's so strong and ominous at the same time! "Fragda" slices through neck-twisting riffs and drums. "Abyssal Mouth" is another track released as a single but since revamped. The heaviness really bursts out alongside those haunting vocals by Filip. And we have more of those machine-gun blast beats.
Exploding into your ears like a xenomorph exploding from a person's chest is "Pulsating Black", heavy right from the opening bass pulse. "For Sorg" is an instrumental for who wanting a break from the vocals while staying heavy. "Like Flies" is filled with fast riff darkness and some more sinister vocals by Filip. "Sterile" is good but nothing special.
Another interlude "Being" is interesting, starting off with a demonically distorted audio sample from Jordan Peterson. The expansive "Vanda" displays more of the band's quest for the ultimate heaviness. Each moment is more brutal than the last, with some fast energy added in. The chains of heaviness tighten again in "Rampant" with more technicality in the riffing. The closing outro "Dodgud" wraps it up in total extremeness after a soft ambient start.
The Swedish brutal descendant of djent, thall is held in place by Vildhjarta and Humanity's Last Breath. The latter band's second album Abyssal has given them the right to own the throne of heaviness. They've earned it!
Favorites: "Bursting Bowel of Tellus", "Bone Dust", "Abyssal Mouth", "Like Flies", "Vanda", "Rampant"
Thall is one of the most destructive genres in metal and music in general. This djent subgenre with elements of deathcore/metalcore and even smaller fractions of doom, death, and black metal, is a clear definition of modern extreme metal, and the people in Metal Archives who decide which bands to add must've overlooked this subgenre simply because they hate djent. The founding trio of the subgenre includes Vildhjarta, Reflections, and of course, HUMANITY'S LAST BREATH.
Just the name of this band can induce fear of a catastrophic apocalypse tearing the world apart from the inside, and it fits greatly with the material too. Crushing destruction that you can never escape from, just like a black hole. Darkness and fear are common themes for many metal bands past and present, but they're tame compared to what Humanity's Last Breath can do. The darkness is a lot more massive. Supermassive! The powerful devastation is much more than any other band's attempt at that. It will erase you from existence and bring you back, making an unforgettable experience like none other.
The atmospheric darkness first appears in the "Intro", lasting for a minute. You might think it's boring, but it's just the start of the massive sound it would lead to. The two-track suite "Bellua" is better suited as a full 8-minute epic rather than two parts. Altogether they display the heaviness of the album to come. With "Human Swarm", you can't go wrong with brutality in deathcore and djent. They know how to bust sh*t hard. After a spoken line of "We stop the wind from blowing", then comes a f***ing massive breakdown near the 3-minute mark. A nice surprise for the more extreme 'core listeners. Practically heavier than all that's heavy! Quite hard and evil for the moshpit. Then comes the beastly "Animal", another one of the heaviest tracks here. It's a re-recorded version of an earlier single, and the monstrous fury is so unreal.
"Shoals" speeds things up, sounding closer to standard death metal, maybe even melodeath. Nothing but skull-smashing velocity! Then we lose some brutality in the riffing in "Tellus Aflame". It's not really the best track of the album, but it still rules, and the perfect score isn't affected. "Vultus" is another hard-hitting track. The mix of heavy brutality and subtle melody makes it similar to a less symphonic The Breathing Process. Then there's the short atmospheric interlude "Drone". It's almost like a continuation of the intro that then leads to perhaps the most doom-laden part of the album.
The next track "Void" was released as a single for the album, the first single to not be a re-recording. Although it's quite killer and still maintaining the 5-star album rating, it doesn't represent the slamming might the rest of the album has and make me question its usage as a single. The heaviness returns to full gear in "Anti". Then "Make Me Blind" unleashes the brutal fury one last time. The "Outro" ends it all like it's literally the end of the world. By the time the destructive drama fades out, nothing would remain.
Humanity’s Last Breath has followed in the footsteps of Vildhjarta and made things more moshable and destructive. Their debut marks a strong memorable start to their journey of creativity and apocalyptic heaviness. By the power of THALL!
Favorites: "Bellua" (both parts), "Human Swarm", "Shoals", "Vultus", "Anti", "Make Me Blind"
One of the best things about metal is its diversity and the ability to combine different genres both metal and non-metal. Born of Osiris are the masters of combining metalcore with elements of djent and deathcore, and in their new album Through Shadows, they've added an alt-metal cherry on top! And writing for the album started around the same time as their previous album Angel or Alien that was rewritten after failing to be a companion for their incomplete album The Simulation.
As with many of their albums, Through Shadows is an excellent one with many twists and turns. The djent-ish alt-metalcore sound is so diverse and interesting. All you can expect here is the unexpected.
A robotic female voice that starts "Seppuku" leads to an explosion of sharp riffing and digital electronics. Everything's so simple yet futuristic. "Elevate" has an accessible rave-ish groove, and the chorus mixes together electronics and riffs quite well. The 5-minute title track is another journey for Born of Osiris. Impressive vocals here, both the screams and cleans! "The War That You Are" has both heaviness and melody cranked up. And holy sh*t, the riffing and vocals are as deathcore as their earlier material.
We also have some Middle Eastern vibes in "Inverno" along with some pleasant melody. On the flip side, "A Mind Short Circuiting" is a dissonant riff frenzy only for those experienced with the band and sci-fi action video games. "Burning Light" is a melancholic synth interlude to act as the album's intermission. It segues to "In Desolation" which has a similar vibe to some melodic metalcore bands, and that I really enjoy. "Torchbearer" is the first single for the album, released nearly two years before the rest of the album. They never cease to amaze me, and I might try exercising with this song on play.
Then we have the perfect "Activated", in which everything experienced so far is put together in a trancey metalcore fiesta. I love the guest vocals by Underoath's Spencer Chamberlain and the saxophone solo that can surpass "Careless Whisper". Then "Dark Fable" has more of the electronic synths and metal beats, and the clean vocals in the chorus sound so tranquil. "Transcendence" borrows some electronic experimentation for early 2010s Linkin Park. "Blackwater" ends the album with epic crushing sorrow.
I'm glad that the new Born of Osiris album has come out and I got listen to it and review it once it got added to this site. Through Shadows is another amazing work of art from this unique band to appreciate. It's something diverse music listeners need in their lives, and let's hope they have another album in the writing works as we speak!
Favorites: "Seppuku", "Through Shadows", "The War That You Are", "In Desolation", "Torchbearer", "Activated", "Blackwater"
I'm quite used to this epic blackened deathcore sound now and can enjoy bands like The Breathing Process. The band made a new EP in 2023, their first since the demos, entitled Todeskrone (Death's Crown). Here the sometimes-fast sometimes-slow extreme sound of Labyrinthian continues and shows that the band are back in their earlier quick pace of making new material. OK, it's not a lot since their previous release two years prior, with this one being just a 4-track EP. Still it's another straight-on example of their symphonic blackened deathcore sound that would later be credited to the new more popular bands of that style. And it's also where it's just that, symphonic blackened deathcore! Barely any of their earlier melodeath has remained in this release.
The 4 tracks in this EP are all nicely-refined bangers that again continue what they had in Labyrinthian. However, it has more of the deathly direction they're usually known for with barely any of the melody in the more experimental tracks. That's where the lack of melodeath can be heard compared to earlier albums. I love this because it gives them more in common with the more popular bands of the epic blackened deathcore scene such as Lorna Shore, Mental Cruelty, Worm Shepherd, and later Carnifex. On the other hand, the reduction of experimentation makes the release have slightly less of the perfect glory of those previous 3 albums.
Striking with vicious vocal layers is the first song "Empty, Not Alone". Their current vocalist Chris Rabideau sounds so monstrous, and I mean that in a good way. "Hell is Almost Heaven" really lets it rip with vocals and instrumentation of total hellfire. "Clawed" is filled with noise and chaos, and includes guest vocals by the talented Devin Duarte of Worm Shepherd. The closing title track is an epic throwback to the blackened side of their past and it's packed with sounds of deathly destruction.
Though not as perfect as most of the band's discography, Todeskrone displays a promising direction of where The Breathing Process will go next. I hope to hear more of their strength and talent in their upcoming album later this year or the next!
Favorites: "Empty, Not Alone", "Todeskrone"
You know how much I love epic blackened deathcore, from the likes of Lorna Shore, Mental Cruelty, Worm Shepherd, etc., with songs containing a cauldron of epic melodies, downtuned riffs, and brutal breakdowns. Two genres that I once thought were too much for my taste have come together for something so intriguing. But does anyone know the band that really started it all?
The Breathing Process is the unsung pioneer of this style of deathcore, back in 2008 with their debut In Waking Divinity, alongside Winds of Plague. It was a somewhat rough start, though Odyssey (Un)Dead and Samsara are glorious examples of the sound. And maintaining that perfect streak is one of the best albums of 2021, Labyrinthian!
After the eerie first half-minute of the opening "Terminal", blast beats soar through the darkened skies. The speed has gotten me hooked, and it's not until the breakdown when everything slows down for an intense increase in tension. "Shadow Self" greatly blends the symphonic melodeath of Skyfire and early Starkill with the deathly metalcore of Bleeding Through. Another standout is "Wilt" with its heavy blackened riffing and guest vocals by David Simonich of Signs of the Swarm.
"A Savage Plea" has a beautiful intro and then rises into one of the more savage tracks here. The synth-filled blackened title track would certainly work well for a video game boss battle, and that boss is guest vocalist Jamie Graham (Viscera, ex-Sylosis). Even more blackened is "I Sleep, I Wake", their longest track at over 7 minutes, with the final two being one of the most blackened moments in the entire album. "Heir to None" is more atmospheric, but what's with the samples in the intro? They sound oddly placed and knock a few percentage points off what would've been a 100% rating. Still this song shows the band in divine form.
"Shroud" shrouds the blackened deathcore sound with some melodies borrowed from Still Remains. "Atlas" is also more melodic, almost in Parkway Drive territory, while staying in their usual sound. "We the Drowned" marks yet another epic deathcore album ending with the best climax. The melancholic finale where all the symphonics and heavy chords and melodies rise up once more before collapsing into just sorrowful piano is just beautiful.
All in all, Labyrinthian continues to seal The Breathing Process as the ultimate founder of the melodic symphonic blackened deathcore scene. Everything is mindful and perfect (except for the intro of "Heir to None"). Anyone still listening to those more popular bands of this style, take a break from them and check this band out. For real!
Favorites: "Shadow Self", "Wilt", "Labyrinthian", "I Sleep, I Wake", "We the Drowned"
Being the contrarian that I am, I must admit that Ascendancy was never my favourite Trivium record of the 2000s. It has always been a top 5 release, but could never overtake the likes of The Crusade and Shogun. Those records always had slightly more edge than their most successful and breakout album from 2005. That is not meant to serve as an insult to Ascendancy because while the album does sound patchy at points and also takes forever to end, this is the kind of melodic metalcore that does more than your standard hardcore album of the era.
When I think of this time frame of melodic metalcore, names like Killswitch Engage, Bullet for my Valentine and Parkway Drive inevitably come up. Trivium fall into the category with bands like Shadows Fall; following the trends of mainstream success, but with a nostalgic flare. My major criticism of this new wave of hardcore music is that songs are not constructed well, as they alternate back and forth between a quasi heavy metal section and a slow, brooding chugging breakdown. It transforms the album from Iron Maiden worship into an almost fully realized modernization. Trivium will exploit that detail here on Ascendancy almost to the point of being insufferable. Songs like "Pull Harder on the String of Your Martyr" and "Ascendancy" have some excellent grooves for about two-thirds of their length. Then during the bridge, the tempo and style drastically change so that the guitar players can wail for a while, before concluding with a return to the original form. Ironically, these deviations don't bother me as much as they would if they were on a modern metalcore record. "A Gunshot to the Head of Trepidation" starts off nostalgia farming with two riffs back-to-back that are just "One" and "Fear of the Dark" before becoming something else entirely about halfway through. The initial whiplash is perplexing, but Trivium allows that groove to simmer and burn instead of hanging it out to dry when the guitar solos conclude.
I must say that this riffing is fantastic. During a time when melodic metalcore was at a peak in the collective mainstream, there were few acts that could devise riffs like Trivium. Not only could they crank up the intensity on a whim, but they also knew that slowing down giving a reprieve would allow those solos to bit even more impactful. In a genre where tempo has gotten progressively slower over time, Ascendancy is a nostalgic trip back to the genre's thrash roots. Bands like Killswitch Engage and All That Remains could write better hooks, but Trivium are no slouch in this department either. I mean, one listen to "Dying in Your Arms" affirms that. And the album doesn't overindulge in its production. All of the records key aspects are pristine and precise; you won't find any symphonic or synthetic elements to bog down the mixing and overwhelm the listener during its thrashier segments.
This is just a really good album. Ascendancy represents a side of melocore during the mid 2000s that wanted to crossover, instead of being relegated to the kiddie pool. Many metalcore bands of the time were completely fine with playing Warped Tour, while Trivium were playing on MTV2 with Chimaira, Arch Enemy, In Flames and Lamb of God. Trivium got their recognition and ballooned into more progressive sounds later on Shogun and beyond. As its name suggests, Trivium really ascended to the top of the metal world around this time, and for good reason.
Best Songs: A Gunshot to the Head of Trepidation, Drowned and Torn Asunder, The Deceived, Pull Harder on the Strings of Your Martyr
Well, guess I listen to deathcore now.
This is not surprising given the sudden rise in popularity of genre over the past four years. When the legacy media showered Lorna Shore with praise in 2022 and named Pain Remains their album of the year, it brought in a bunch of new ears into a genre that had been stuck in 2012 for too long. And a budding scene spearheaded it back into the forefront as bands like Signs of the Swarm, Mental Cruelty and AngelMaker enter the publics field of vision, while other, older bands like Fit for an Autopsy and Whitechapel's Hymns in Dissonance revive their older sounds.
Since Lorna Shore are releasing their new album later this year, and I will undoubtedly be asked to talk about that, we’ll save the more in-depth discussions for another day. But Shadow of Intent were a band that I always liked from a distance. Chris Wiseman has proven to be a solid composer of melodic deathcore in the past. The question now becomes “how long can they keep this up without changing their personality?”
Well with the way things are going in the new deathcore scene, it’s hard to imagine SoI (Shadow of Intent) needing to change their sound. While all these new bands are trying to chase the Lorna Shore plateau, SoI are essentially making melodic death metal with a punk twist. The first track, “Prepare to Die” begins the record with some very strong foundations before the vocals enter and bring all the pieces together. On the flipside, “Feeding the Meatgrinder” sounds like SoI trying to make an old school death metal classic. “Flying the Black Flag” shows those deathcore roots a little too plainly; whether it be the rapid-fire vocal delivery from Ben Duerr, or the out-of-place breakdown that closes the song.
Imperium Delirium does have its fair share of obtuse moments, but most of the time those shifts in pace are very well executed. The percussion lays a lot of groundwork here, where a guitar can play the same riff over two very different percussion grooves and can produce two very different reactions from the listener. “Infinity of Horrors” and “They Murdered Sleep” are both early album standouts for that reason. As the album progresses, “Beholding the Sickness of Civilization” continues this trend in the best way on the album. I’ve always enjoyed when the band tries to be a bit more progressive; whether on “The Dreaded Mystic Abyss” or here on “Imperium Delirium”. Meanwhile, the instrumental track “Apocalypse Canvas” doesn’t really do much for me; its inclusion on the record may bring fond memories of “The Dreaded Mystic Abyss”, but it’s played over a very pedestrian melodic deathcore groove and feels like a wasted opportunity.
One thing that I can give Imperium Delirium a ton of credit for is how it does not follow the status quo; either within the modern deathcore trends, or Shadow of Intent’s typical texture. Melodic deathcore might seem like a counterintuitive concept, and even then, SoI are not satisfied. This album has more variety than previous releases and somehow more technical. The Dream Theater progressive techniques have been put on the backburner and replaced with more variety in songwriting, and they are also unashamed to have a little fun, paying homage to their influences.
In the end, I really enjoyed Imperium Delirium. As a melodic death metal album, it is heavy as hell but never feeling like its simply going through the motions of that genre, as it draws inspiration from the old school. As a deathcore album, Imperium Delirium’s breakdowns are filthy without feeling like whiplash. For a genre that I once admitted to “not getting” and treating with bad faith, Shadow of Intent are (for now) the lone deathcore band that I really enjoy and keep coming back to. When it is pedestrian, it’s still pretty good, if a little derivative. But when SoI tries something new, they hit the mark with flying colours.
Best Songs: They Murdered Sleep, Prepare to Die, Beholding the Sickness of Civilization, Imperium Delirium, Feeding the Meatgrinder











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