Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Fear of Domination - Atlas (2016) Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Fear of Domination - Atlas (2016)

Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 07, 2025 / 0

You can barely find any disappointment from Fear of Domination and their industrial melodeath sound. Heavy riffs and dance-y synths are what you can expect from this hybrid of genres. The keyboards might take some time to get used to, just like it did for me albeit quickly. The "shocking" aesthetics also show that the band is not afraid to have some fun in the serious realms in metal. What else can ask you for from this cool band?!

Actually I would ask for a little more of their earlier industrial side since some of it is dropped off for a dark-ish atmosphere that wasn't entirely present in Distorted Delusions. That's been used greatly in a few songs in that album, and now it's used more in Atlas. Though a few songs ignore that and give the album a back and forth vibe.

"Misery" is an interesting intro that reminds me of some of Avatar's softer moments. Then "Divided" starts, and while that one's still great, it's not how I want the album to begin. Saku Solin shouts out his vocals in a rap-ish tone with an occasional "Suck it! Suck it!". But I like the melodic chorus with subtle choir. That's the Fear of Domination I remember from Create.Control.Exterminate! Then we have the energetic "Primordial" with its headbanging beat. The synth helps give the metal instrumentation more life. Those keys shine in the spotlight while the guitars are comfortable in the backstage, relaxing in the verses then unleashing all its power in the chorus. Majestic! "Colossus" continues the industrial machinery with dark thrash-ish rhythms. Riffs and synths make a punishing interplay.

For "El Toro", I love the soloing that's a rarity for this album. However, the keys have a bit of wasted potential. "Carnival Apocalypse" is more apocalyptic-sounding. Although it's mostly melodic, there's some heaviness that almost comes out as a cyber/industrial Fleshgod Apocalypse. We also have some vocal variety in "Messiah".

"Adrenaline" sounds more mainstream, but it actually makes the album's ultimate highlight. Metallic riffing and galactic keys shine brighter than the sun. Perhaps one of the most memorable anthemic tracks they've ever done! But then it leads to the title track that doesn't have the same action. The final track "Final Transmission" hits hard and has some background female-sung beauty. It came close to being the ultimate highlight before the aforementioned "Adrenaline" took the throne.

There are very few flaws here and they're so small that they're overshadowed by the enjoyable majority of the album. Lots of intense action that blends heaviness and melody. Fear of Domination continues to impress me and should really catch on with the rest of the world!

Favorites: "Primordial", "Colossus", "Carnival Apocalypse", "Adrenaline", "Final Transmission"

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