Saxy S's Reviews
I knew when I initiated the review draft in the Infinite that I was going to have to listen to albums like Ron Jarzombek's Solitarily Speaking of Theoretical Confinement. This is pure guitar wank, delivered over a single, continuous idea, where the tracks are not serve as the end of an idea; it gives the record a conceptual feel. The biggest issue is that it takes the compositional approach of the Minutemen's fantastic record, Double Nickels on the Dime, with short song fragments and a whopping forty-five tracks! As a progressive metal album, this record comes nowhere close to matching Minutemen's punchiness and instant connectivity.
Progressive metal has a hard time on the best of days to create a concept album that is conceptual, but this takes it to the extreme in the worst way possible. Ron is switching to and from different patterns and ideas like a schizophrenic and does not have a care in the world for making this record memorable beyond "look how quirky it is!" With almost every track on the album running less than two minutes, songs that were compositionally uninteresting before become unbearable on repeated listens.
It becomes more apparent when you look at the names of some of tracks on this record and realize that most of them were likely afterthoughts: "Frank Can Get Drunk And Eat Beer", "Grizzly Bears Don't Fly Airplanes", "Sex With Squeakie" and "Tri, Tri Again" are just some examples that tell me nothing about the artist, or the artwork that is being presented. This is lifeless, guitar wank that I would like to thoroughly repress from my mind after being overrun with and endless stream of guitar students during post-secondary school who play this exact same shit. And now most of them are wondering why no one wants to hire them.
Best Songs: Melodramatic Chromatic, Battle Of The Hands, Sabbatic Chromatic, Two Thirds Of Satan, In The Name Of Ron
Genres: Progressive Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2002
I feel obligated at this point in the year to talk about my Revolution album of the year. Although calling this hardcore is more of a misnomer. Fit For An Autopsy used to be deathcore, but now resemble something closer to technical death metal. It's a very similar career trajectory to Job For A Cowboy. And like with that band, Fit For An Autopsy have gotten better with age, with Oh What the Future Holds likely being the bands best.
Fit For An Autopsy know the art of songwriting and explore this over the unconventional foundation of technical death metal. For every breakdown that is present on "A Higher Level of Hate", "Pandora" and "Savages", each one is given time to breathe and is used as a compositional tool for breakdowns later on in the piece, but also for the technical interludes that exist between the chugging. Even the albums lesser moments like "In Shadows" are still good compositions, but are held back by less than stellar hooks.
Like with all tech-deah/deathcore, I should make a quick note about the production, since that is usually the one thing that pulls albums down for me and Fit For An Autopsy are not about to ruin a perfectly good idea with piss poor production. Each idea is allowed to flourish and plays in tandem with the other instruments. The guitar work here is fantastic and is given a solid foundation by the bass and percussion to solo/chug over. The vocals are likely the weakest part since they rarely deviate from a common mid scream, but that's hardly a big deal breaker for me. The instrumentals are more than enough of an adventure that a steady vocal timbre is a welcome return home so to speak.
Not a surprising release, but one that I was thrilled hear and am still thrilled by almost a year later.
Best Songs: Pandora, Far from heaven, A Higher Level of Hate, Conditional Healing, Savages
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
The newest release from Darko US is an album that I have a hard time trying to figure out who is meant to enjoy it. The deathcore tag here is misleading as there is next to nothing death metal about it. It has Tom Barber's vocals as well as pick scrapes, but Oni does not have a single blast beat on the record. On the other hand, it isn't metalcore either, because the vocals can become overbearing at times and those instrumentals do not provide the listener with a sense of comfort that you might expect from a record from August Burns Red or Killiswitch Engage. No matter what side of the Revolution clan you're in, you're all losers here!
This record is heavily dependent on groove instead of melody and so you'll find many of its breakdowns dependent on djent foundations. And while many of this records breakdowns are satisfying, I also find myself getting very tired of hearing them repeated over and over again without any direction. Darko US try to provide a semblance of growth and a much needed diversion by having Loathe-esque shoegaze/post-metal interludes. The biggest issue is that they aren't fully formed ideas and instead just feel like...well, interludes. The only one that comes close to resembling a full formed song is "Come Home", which is immediately followed by the albums non-closer "Redo". I don't know where the hype surrounding this album comes from. It's too heavy for the metalcore crowd, not heavy enough for the deathcore crowd, and those of us just looking for good music will have to look elsewhere.
Best Songs: Come Home, Dragon Chaser, Gantz
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
The Best Slipknot Album of 2022
I have been pretty hard on Slipknot recently...and rightfully so. As much as they served as a gateway toward a heavier portion of metal music, they also seem to have grown a tired act with very little keeping them afloat beyond Corey Taylor's sheer persistence. Older music has grown cringy, and new music lacks any growth. So why would I not be excited to hear a new era Slipknot, with heavier metalcore tendencies and glitchy electronics via Frontierer?
Well this record is basically just that, so if those descriptors appeal to you in any way, you might find Tallah's new album, The Generation Of Danger a good one. The problem is that it does not do much else beyond the initial hybrid. The vocal timbre is varied as Justin Bonitz uses the full vocal range; nu metal rapping, singing, pig squeals and gutturals to hide that many of these instrumentals are pretty basic. The electronics and unconventional guitar patterns occur almost on cue within every single track and without any suspense or divergence, the breakdowns that fill this album are not that efficient. Not to mention how breakdowns constantly peak in the mix, making them less enjoyable to listen to then the melodic passages anyway.
I think what sets this album apart is how melodic songs are kept separated in the track listing. It shows how Tallah can pull off a melodic hardcore and a frenetic mathcore at the same time and that dichotomy is sometimes well noted. However, just like with Slipknot, The Generation Of Danger is a long record, with every track eclipsing at least four minutes. This makes the frenzy filled mathcore tunes feel like they go on forever without anything that resembles a sense of growth or direction, whether that be within an individual song, or leading into a more melodic tune next in the album listing. I think back to Loathe's 2020 album I Let It In And It Took Everything and how those heavier metalcore songs were shorter to compliment the dreamy, Deftones inspired melodic ones. And this record does not have that level of complexity.
Why I still find myself viewing the album more favourably despite all of this is despite the mishaps, it still feels genuine and unique. All Hope Is Gone era Slipknot was the bands best in terms of its craftsmanship and execution and Tallah are running with that sound and turning it on its head, since Slipknot don't seem very eager to return to that form any time soon. The plunderphonics that have been added to enhance the sound may be challenging to adapt to, but creates something that can push the boundaries of what can be deemed "accessible" metalcore. But structurally, it falls flat compositionally and without much of a change of pace, even for just one track, the record does drag with how one note it can become.
Best Songs: The Hard Reset, For The Recognition, Telescope, Wendrid
Genres: Alternative Metal Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Mike Patton is insane.
Are you surprised that he has a crossover thrash side project? Because you should not be. I will say though that when it comes to modern thrash music, Dead Cross might be some of the more forward thinking thrash metal that has been heard in a little while. Mike Patton brings his own unique sense of humor to this second album, while still managing to maintain some semblance of seriousness as this album's political overtones push it beyond just a gimmick project. I find myself on more than one occasion perplexed by compositional direction here, but the short runtime do not allow the Mike Patton-ism's to become overly distracting and makes for a pretty fun listen overall.
Best Songs: Heart Reformer, Strong and Wrong, Christian Missile Crisis, Reign of Error
Genres: Thrash Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I might have to come to terms with the fact that thrash metal might just not be for me anymore. It feels like a toxic relationship at times; where I know I should leave, but something just keeps bringing me back hoping for a change. A genre that seems so contempt with playing a very safe formula of thrash music that borrows almost on cue from Megadeth, Slayer and Exodus. The genre has next to no innovation and until someone comes in to fill the void left behind by Vektor, I may never see a need to return to this genre again.
But that opinion does appear to be changing. While many mainstream outlets are paying attention to a new wave of Japanese metal, extreme metal seems to have found a comfortable mold in South America, and specifically, Chile. Within the last six months, I have been introduced to technical death metallers, Inanna, and in thrash, Parkcrest and Critical Defiance. And each album has provided some positive strides for their respective genres, with No Life Forms easily being the most surprising album of the bunch.
Let's get something clear out the way quickly: thrash metal is not a very difficult genre of music to perform. With roots firmly in punk, a messy and juvenile approach is very easy to replicate. For this, Critical Defiance would get a free pass, but would have to compliment it with something else, particularly in the songwriting. For that, Critical Defiance are doing thrash metal far better than most others. No Life Forms is melodic and hook heavy; every track is built on one or two ideas and weaved together instead of just piling riffs one after the other with no sense of direction.
What also helps is the length of this record. I cannot begin to tell you how agonizing it is to look at a new thrash metal album with a runtime exceeding fifty minutes. Critical Defiance are literally being defiant here by having a record short of half-an-hour. Tracks are punchy and to the point. Guitar riffs take center stage on every piece and they influence every other piece of the song; from the bass lines (yes there are bass lines here!) to the percussion and the vocals. Solos are aplenty and most are implemented remarkably well, except for maybe the instrumental "Elephant", which does suffer from sounding like a glorified wank instead of say "Orion".
Compositionally I think No Life Forms is trying a little too hard to be like classic thrash, but Critical Defiance have a unique timbre about them making them stand out from some still clear influences. Such as the structure of "Kill Them with Kindness" being a direct copy of "Angel of Death". While the rest of the album (i.e. "A World Crumbling Apart", "Dying Breath" and "Warhead (Emotional Fallout)") takes a lot of liberties to early Sepultura.
No Life Forms by Critical Defiance might not be the most modern thrash album ever, but for what it's worth, it is a great album. Music does not need to be progressive in order to be good, it just has to sound like it. This band has mastered the thrash metal formula of old in order to turn it into something new and if more artists start following in their wake, thrash metal will be better for it.
Best Songs: Altering the Senses, Dying Breath, Kill The with Kindness, No Life Forms
Genres: Thrash Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I wish I hadn't called this in 2021, but it was quite easy to see the cracks forming through the last album and now we have reached the empty void of sellout Architects. Since I had very little experience with this band during their heavier metalcore days, I went into 2021's For Those That Wish To Exist with muted optimism, but optimism nonetheless. I thought the album was pretty bland, but Architects maintained some of their identity that was present on Holy Hell, but now this band is stuck in alternative metalcore purgatory. I cannot find myself excited about anything here because it all sounds formulaic and basic; none of the songs stand out and simply go through the motions of an alternative metalcore album. Not to mention the poor production from the last album has not been fixed, and the style changes and breakdowns evoke zero reaction.
Sam Carter has recently gone on record saying that metal music fans are elitists in that they do not want their beloved bands changing and becoming more accessible as a way to deflect criticism of this new record. Despite the fact that this happens in all types of music, I see the appeal of this sentiment. I've spoken many times on and off the internet about this very same thing and it baffles me that this practice still takes place today. What Sam Carter forgot to mention was the lost identity of Architects in that transition. This sounds like it could have been written by a computer. The new Architects album contains the classic symptoms of a broken soul.
Best Songs: burn down my house, a new moral high ground
Genres: Alternative Metal Industrial Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
The sudden acclaim that has poured at the feet of Lorna Shore is nothing short of incredible. Once a fairly generic deathcore band during the 2010s, following a multiple vocalist delay to the bands tenure, one which included multiple sexual misconduct allegations, Lorna Shore hired a fresh face in Will Ramos to take the helm. And following a 2021 EP that shook the metalcore world down to its core, we finally have a full length LP to indulge in.
And to say that it is conflicting is a bit of an understatement. This new sound can be best compared to Fleshgod Apocalypse by just how insane some of the instrumental work is. The drums sound inhumane at times, while the guitar is playing really fast tremolo picking patterns that are occasionally broken up by a solo. The low end is massive, and the symphonic elements give each one of these songs a genuine melody or two to build from. Will Ramos' vocals are really something in how they are able to be manipulated through screeching highs, guttural lows, and everything in between. Once again, I return to the word "inhumane" because that might be the only appropriate way to describe the pure hell that exists on Pain Remains.
Unlike Fleshgod Apocalypse though, this is a deathcore band so get ready for breakdowns, and a lot of them. Like with so many of the worst metalcore albums, the breakdowns are what make or break the record for me and I can tell that Lorna Shore does not do nearly enough to change this. Pain Remains seems to think that the best thing for its breakdowns is to remove the symphonic elements entirely, drop the tempos down painstakingly, and chug its way to the most disgusting stank face you can make. They feel very simplistic with very little variety. Some of the breakdowns on "Into the Earth", parts of "Sun//Eater" and "Soulless Existence" sound good, and the restrain to hold the pummeling breakdown to the very end of the closing suite "Pain Remains" is well executed.
But it's the production that keeps this record from achieving anything greater. This record is trying so hard to sound epic and transcendent that many of its most important elements are drowned out by the noise. A relentless percussion, especially the kick drum, sound overly mic'd and drowns out the symphonic melodies. In addition the vocals are pretty high concept with themes of depression as well as growth from that depression, so why are Ramos' vocals so condensed and hidden behind an endless wall of effects? I understand that, in this kind of music, the delivery of the vocals is more important than the words themselves. But then why would the band put so much time and effort into them like this? It all feels like far too much stuff is happening and nothing is allowed to breathe.
At the end of the day, Pain Remains is a good album. Not in a long time have I heard a technical death metal/deathcore album that was as melodically driven as this one. Not in a long time have I made a stank face during a breakdown as filthy as these ones. But the album is incredibly flawed in many of the same ways that so many other technical death meal/deathcore albums are flawed. And that starts with the production. It's an album that shows potential, but tries too hard for the sake of accessibility, and at the determent of the album's quality. These songs likely sound much better live than they do digitally. I guess the...high gain remains.
Best Songs: Into the Earth, Cursed to Die, Soulless Existence, Pain Remains II: After All I've Done, I'll Disappear
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Alter Bridge are a band that have continued to defy expectations of how generic an AOR band can be. Littering their songs with huge, anthemic vocal hooks from Myles Kennedy, the instrumentals continue to play an integral role in most tunes beyond just chords. And Pawns & Kings is no exception. Longer song structures with extended instrumental interludes, strong shout choruses, good use of dynamic contrast, and a production that does not give special preference to one part over the others. And credit where it is due; Alter Bridge have been doing this for a long time without becoming too stagnant on a greater scale. However, condensed within Alter Bridge's discography, you might start to notice some of the cracks. The shorter tracks like "Silver Tongue" and "Holiday" are decent singles, but don't highlight an older Alter Bridge at their best. Furthermore, the obligatory progressive song, "Fable of the Silent Son" serves as well placed detour within the tracklist, but cannot hold a candle to songs like "Blackbird" and "Fortress" from those respective albums. I think it shows that this band has good variety of style, which can be appealing to a younger audience still discovering metal. But after nearly twenty years, this band has become a one trick chess piece.
Best Songs: This is War, Sin After Sin, Season of Promise, Pawns & Kings
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
My interactions with coldrain have been limited due to the Gateway spheres I frequent being slightly more on the progressive side. But I have heard plenty of tunes from this band thanks to the many song recommendations for monthly playlists. And in all honesty, I might have liked this band more during the 2000s as opposed to discovering them in the late 2010s. Their brand of melodic metalcore is fairly generic and the alternative leanings such as melodic songwriting sounds formulaic.
Case in point, the bands newest album, Nonnegative. When coldrain isn't directly ripping off older bands such as Slipknot on "Cut Me", Parkway Drive/Shadows Fall with "From Today", and a laundry list of chug-chug-chug metalcore bands on "Rabbit Hole", these tunes just are not that interesting. The album might have a decent guitar melody from time to time, but the vocals just feel forced and lacking in emotive drive. Nowhere is that more apparent than on the No Doubt cover of "Don't Speak", which, while not a great song in its own right, Gwen's vocals were timid and hushed as the protagonist goes through a breakup. The vocalist of coldrain doesn't seem to have a problem singing like the lead singer of a power metal band here, creating a weird dichotomy; not just between the vocals and the lyrics, but the instrumentals as well.
It all leaves me with a feeling of nothingness because I've heard all of this before...twenty years ago. coldrain's newest album does not do anything interesting to its influences, and when it does it isn't very good. It's attempts at alternative metalcore are met with a resounding "meh" from me as I have heard plenty of newer artists (i.e. Spiritbox, Bad Omens) and even older groups like Northlane growing the sound beyond the Of Mice and Men and The Devil Wears Prada's of the world. At least when BABYMETAL came out of the new J-rock scene, it was something new and got people talking. Maybe coldrain don't want to be BABYMETAL and that's fine and they will find their audience. But a well oiled machine has to keep moving, and coldrain are still stuck on ten year old technology.
Best Songs: Before I Go, Boys And Girls, PARADISE (Kill The Silence)
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I never really god into Lamb of God growing up. I could tell that they were an impressive metalcore/groove metal band that knew how to write infectious melodies, but I could always tell that they were better served as a singles band and albums could never hold the attention of my pretentious prog mind for too long. They were clearly influenced by Pantera and received the hallowed status as that band did, which never sat well with me.
Now I haven't listened to much LoG since Strum und Drang as my listening circles were far more diverse and less metal oriented. But after Adler left the group, a self titled album and now Omens, I was willing to give Lamb of God another chance. And yeah, this is pretty good. It feels like a return to form for the band; the return of heavier songs, faster riffs and less clean singing.
And once again, I am reminded that Lamb of God are absolutely a singles band. "Nevermore", "Omens" and "Grayscale" all contain peak Lamb of God tropes, while just being a straight up good song to listen to. But those deep cuts lose momentum and start to run together after a while. More so than any other Lamb of God record, this one is the closest to sounding like metalcore, specifically August Burns Red. The use of chugging riffs while a moving guitar lead soars above is fine, but loses its touch after about the fifth song.
"Denial Mechanism" has the band go for that more thrashier side like the old school Pantera album Cowboys From Hell. The issue is that it is the albums shortest track, and also the penultimate one before the slower "September Song" to close out. Neither of these changes of pace are presented well and leaves the album feeling like something was missing; a constant issue of later Lamb of God albums.
Despite all of this, there is a reason why Lamb of God's name is so well recognized in the mainstream metal circles. They capture the heaviness of Pantera and develop it into a new age, without losing what makes Pantera songs like "Walk" and "5 Minutes Alone" so great. It is not an album I intend on returning to all that much, but for a late stage album from a higher echelon metal band, I cannot deny this record as being a lot of fun.
Best Songs: Nevermore, Ditch, Ill Designs, Grayscale
Genres: Groove Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Call me pretentious all you want, but I liked Slipknot after they started going more mainstream. Everyone goes gaga for the S/T debut and Iowa because of (relatively) how heavy they were, but I could barely tell you anything about the records beyond Corey Taylor's whine scream/singing. As they cleaned up on The Subliminal Verses and All Hope Is Gone, songs became more memorable, even as deeper cuts held on to some hard hitting tendencies.
The next two albums split the difference between being too boring, and not boring enough! My review of 2019's We Are Not Your Kind was divisive as I couldn't decide whether I liked the experimentation or not. In 2022, Slipknot are back with the end...so far. It feels more like a return to form for the band as they brush up on their nu metal roots, while still playing towards a more accessible crowd circa late 2000s.
Corey Taylor's vocals are vastly improved and the shout choruses can be quite fun if given the time, including a vast improvement in maturity from the early days. Percussion is also greatly improved from the previous album; Jay Weinberg is finding his place within the ensemble and is doing his best to replicate Joey Jordison, while still retaining a unique charm to help normies distinguish The End, So Far from other Slipknot albums.
It has many structural faults though. The first and most obvious one, is the lack of progressive focus. Now some bands do not need to be progressive to be successful, but Slipknot have already laid the foundation for this on their previous album. Longer song structure do not hide that we've heard these riffs time and time again. The industrial moments that were a major selling point of We Are Not Your Kind are almost completely removed. And Slipknot still cannot figure out how to write a metal ballad properly; throw in some harsh vocals and let the songs explode instead of letting them reach a climax is lazy stream farming.
But I cannot say that I hate The End, So Far. It's vastly improved from the previous album, but has nowhere near the same level of highs as before. The album is more streamlined and very pleasant to listen to, but if you're looking for anything beyond that, this is basically just another Slipknot album.
Best Songs: Adderall, The Chapeltown Rag, Hive Mind, Medicine for the Dead, H377
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
A Chilean progressive death metal album that is anything but uninspired. The band labels this album and the band in general as being a three part hybrid of the "70s prog-rock heroes" of lead guitarist Diego Ilabaca, early technical death metal giants like Death and Atheist, and the brutality of Suffocation, Gorguts and Morbid Angel.
The first thing that strikes my interest is the compositions. For many years I have had issue with technical death metal acts having a number of different ideas or motifs that have been tied together by only the thinnest of hog ties, but Inanna have very little of that here. The albums slower moments such as "Evolutionary Inversion" and "Far Away in Other Spheres" are well balanced in how the incorporate technical abundance and having it so it compliments the section directly before it. This is made ever more impressive when it happens on "Mind Surgery".
Death metal is not known for it soaring guitar melodies, but the leitmotifs that we do get out of the guitars also contribute to an albums cohesiveness. The brutality of the instrumentals are well established, but do not go by the wayside due to a lack of theme as so many other tech-death albums have been known to do in the past for me.
One thing Inanna did not take away from Pestilence or Atheist was their compact compositions. Every track extends pass six minutes with a couple surpassing ten and it can feel like some tracks drag on for far too long, especially those ten-plus minute ones. They can quickly diverge into meandering sessions while the band figures what the hell to do next. As well, the album does not end the best with "Cabo de Hornos". It tries to be more atmospheric and invoke ethereal nature, which over the death metal palette sounds cool, but forces the album to lose momentum. Also, Void of Unending Depths is yet another H.P. Lovecraft inspired wankfest, which does not help the closing tracks comparisons to Blut Aus Nord's album from earlier in the year, but also the album as a whole losing some creative points.
Overall, I think Inanna's newest record is a very solid one. As someone who has been overly harsh towards technical death metal in the past, Void of Unending Depths is a very well executed display of how melody can be implemented in a genre known for overvaluing brutality. But loses points for a lack of focus, and a tired concept.
Best Songs: Evolutionary Inversion, Far Away in Other Spheres, Mind Surgery
Genres: Death Metal Progressive Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Recently, another reviewer whose content I frequent gave a short review of the sophomore Holy Fawn album, Dimensional Bleed and gave it some of their highest regards. This intrigued me, so I gave it a few listens myself and... the result was quite solid. One thing that this album proves is that heavy metal music does not need to be at its most brutal at all times to be effective. Dimensional Bleed's post-metal elements are scattered throughout the album and likely never take up more than half of the full runtime. But when they do; those anchoring bass lines are titanic and carry the dreamlike guitars and reverb soaked vocals to the edges of the the human condition. I noticed on more than one occasion where this album was so pleasant and comforting that I'd get locked into a sway, before realizing that I need to focus on the music itself!
That can be a good and bad thing depending on where you approach this album from. On one hand, because each song seamlessly transitions from one to the next and each track is an excellent composition on its own, you could say that Dimensional Bleed has excellent structure, form and delivery. On the other, because each song is built around the same tempo and groove, you might find less variety in the grooves. The only notable exception is "Void of Light", whereas the rest falls into a very cozy doom-y, post-metal, blackgaze sound; a sound quite similar to more modern Deafheaven.
That Deafheaven comparison might be worrisome considering how little I resonated with Infinite Granite. But here it feels more developed and better executed. I struggle to put it in my short list for AOTY because like with a lot of good post-metal, the comfort does not always make for a mesmerizing experience. But for what it is worth, Dimensional Bleed is ethereal so it does live up to its own standards. I doubt many MA members will find much with this, but as a relaxing piece of shoegaze/post-metal, it's really good.
Best Songs: Death Is A Relief, Empty Vials, Dimensional Bleed, Void of Light, True Loss
Genres: Post-Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Another year, another metalcore band going mainstream, another fanbase ready to defile a band and there legacy.
I never listened to Parkway Drive during their 2007 peak, but when they started incorporating more progressive techniques into their music during the mid 2010s, I was intrigued. Ire was a fascinating release and now we have Darker Still. It has to be the breakdowns that have got the negative blowback here because song structures throughout the record are quite standard on "Soul Bleach", "Glitch" and "Like Napalm", and the breaks are not nearly as frequent as previous albums. Some tracks like "The Greatest Fear" have the foundation of a symphonic metal track, but lacks... y'know, the symphonic elements. I found it unique since Parkway Drive are not looking to become symphonic metal, and so having a song structurally like symphonic metal, while still sounding like Parkway Drive is an interesting idea.
When the band gets the most experimental though is when Darker Still is at its best. Perhaps ironically, the title track does contain some stronger symphonic elements, even though it has less in common with symphonic metal and more of Parkway Drive's more progressive tracks on previous releases. Songs like "Imperial Heretic" and "Land of the Lost" are closer to the standard Parkway Drive sound, but subtle intricacies make it stand out tremendously from Horizons era. But that would not be possible without the final track, "From the Heart of the Darkness", which made me do a double take; not just with who was performing it, but the rest of the album. My initial listen was not the most riveting and Darker Still would not be getting this score if I was basing this on my initial listen. "From the Heart of the Darkness" is certainly Parkway Drive, but has a special element that I can't put my finger on. When I went back, I realized how much bigger and expansive this album was, as well as how much Parkway Drive have grown up since Horizons, even on the back half of the record, which does lead into the albums pacing, which is top heavy and only saved by the final two tracks. During a time when every metalcore band wants to sound like Parkway Drive, the same named band wants to push outside of their comfort zone and succeeded. This was a pleasant surprise in 2022.
Best Songs: Like Napalm, The Greatest Fear, Darker Still, Land of the Lost, From the Heart of the Darkness
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Dave Mustaine is one of the most overrated artists/composers in all of heavy metal.
There. I said it. And god does it feel good! This is a man who was so salty about getting kicked out of Metallica that he went and started an anti-Metallica band whose 1980s albums lacked artistic focus and direction that Metallica were able to reproduce in spades throughout their golden run. And yet, Megadeth almost always gets a free pass while a bunch of revisionists will say "Metallica was always bad". Megadeth helped develop the environment in thrash metal where bands don't need to evolve or grow, and can reproduce Rust In Peace ad nauseum for their entire careers and elitists will eat that shit up.
Like Metallica, the 1990s saw Megadeth commercialize to mix results. Unlike Metallica, when their attempts at commercialization alienated longtime fans (or just failing miserably with Risk), they reverted back to an old sound as evidence that Mustaine and company didn't actually care about the music they were making. They basically paved the way for Slayer in the later portion of the 2000s and my complicated relationship with them.
And so, it should be no surprise that The Sick, the Dying... and the Dead! is exactly what you should expect. It's just more Megadeth; you've heard these riffs before possibly hundreds of times. The callbacks to Rust In Peace, Countdown to Extinction and Peace Sells... But Whose Buying? are blatant and have been done to death by Megadeth over the last five records and leaves me with nothing to say. The last Megadeth album that was worth giving a damn about was United Abominations for making a hybrid of the classic 1980s sound with influence from the bands best album, Youthanasia. If you enjoyed Dystopia, well you're in luck because this record is the exact same thing.
Best Songs: Sacrifice, Soldier On!
Genres: Thrash Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
During my recent scrollings through RateYourMusic to see which hot new album was getting the critics panties all twisted up, I saw the newest album from The Callous Daoboys recently featured. And in all honesty, I was not really in the mood for another dose of chaotic mathcore, so I decided to find an album myself to take its place. And this album could not have come at a better time. I caught on to Swedish outlet An Abstract Illusion's debut record, Illuminate The Path in 2017 and was knocked back by how mature it sounded for a debut record. It's progressive death metal that I can only dubiously describe as "atmoshperic death metal". If you listen to black metal in the vein of Wolves in the Throne Room or Windir, or even the blackgaze trailblazers like Alcest...that might be your closest comparison point to An Abstract Illusion.
It's been a long time since that record came out and I have returned to Illuminate The Path much more than I originally anticipated. When the global lockdowns of 2020 happened, I started questioning whether we would ever get a new An Abstract Illusion album, but it's finally here! The band took their time to release some high quality prog death. A concept album rivaling Light of Day, Day of Darkness in it's ambition
The album begins marvelously with a short intro "The Behemoth That Lies Asleep" transitioning into "Slaves". It is not that dissimilar to how the last album began, and the change in pace is not forced. The intro has a short middle passage with lots of double kick pedals and open chord strumming in the guitars. That's followed by some vocoded leads, which remind me of older Between the Buried and Me. "Slaves" continues this comparison with its recurring short burst rhythm in the guitar over blast beat percussion, while the vocals try their best to match the intensity of Tommy Rogers distinguished gutturals. The bass lines are pronounced and given heavy prominence fundamentally allowing the guitars to soar above into some excellent melodies. The only gripe is the breakdown solo near the end; resorting to metalcore chugging riffs felt like a cash grab in my opinion.
Leading into "Tear Down This Holy Mountain", the listener is given a moment of reprieve following the previous track with ambience and a reverb soaked clarinet solo. The main them only begins after 90 to 100 seconds; a plentiful break before the return of the blast beats and tremolo guitar chords. The first half is a little disjointed for my taste, but the back half is where things get fascinating. Beginning with a slow guitar solo over electronic percussion is a unique choice and one I don't think works so well. Later on in the buildup, when the thick bass sustains come in, it switches back to a acoustic percussion, which sounds far more commanding.
"Prosperity" is another song with a clear divider about halfway through. The first half continues some of the BTBAM comparisons I made earlier, while the back half resembles a simplified Meshuggah track. I enjoy it's incorporation better than on the outro of "Slaves", but it drags on for too long and does not develop enough to warrant its extended runtime. "Blomsterkrans" is great; a melodically pleasing piano interlude to calm down the adrenaline that has been firing on all cylinders since the beginning of "Slaves" leading into the albums longest track "In The Heavens Above, You Will Become A Monster", and serves a similar purpose to "Viridian" into "White Walls" on BTBAM's Colors.
In regards to the aforementioned "In The Heavens Above, You Will Become A Monster", I cannot remember the last time I heard a more well constructed progressive metal song before this one. Every segment leads fluently into the next; the dynamic shifts are well placed, the tempo and style changes are built upon the previous sections, and each element connects the entire piece together into something marvelous. It is no surprise that this is the album's crown jewel, perhaps even surpassing "Vakuum" from the last album as the best song An Abstract Illusion have ever written. Which does beg the question: why didn't An Abstract Illusion put this much intricate detail into the album's shorter tracks?
Unlike BTBAM's opus, An Abstract Illusion embrace us with one final track on this album, "This Torment Has No End, Only New Beginnings" and does it hardest to live up to the sky high expectations the band just set on the previous track. This is another wonderful piece that is intricately composed and performed, leading into the albums inconclusive ending. It's potential is fully realized and ends the album in a way that makes me want more, which in this case, is not a bad thing.
The reason I continuously referenced Between The Buried And Me in this album review is because compositionally, Colors might be this albums closest comparison point. What makes it so remarkable is despite how much influence it takes from the source material, An Abstract Illusion made an album that is uniquely theirs. At this point, An Abstract Illusion have no comparisons; they make death metal by way of atmo black bands like Saor and Drudkh. Their compositional power is fantastic, their songwriting is beyond even the best of their progressive death metal contemporaries. Instrumentals are brimming with life; ranging from ebullient joy to the downtrodden of lows. The bass production is superb, the guitar solos, while plenty, are not glorified wank sessions or scale practice. When I think of progressive death metal, this is what I want it to sound like. It feels so close to perfect, but the faults on a few tracks that were ratified on others is a little disappointing. This might be the album to beat in 2022 so far.
Best Songs: Slaves, Tear Down This Holy Mountain, Blomsterkrans, In The Heavens Above, You Will Become A Monster, This Torment Has No End, Only New Beginnings
Genres: Death Metal Progressive Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
The new album from I Prevail has the hybrid of sounds from a number of different nu metal, metalcore and industrial elements, but is unable to coalesce these elements into anything greater than the sum of its parts. I know a lot of fans will listen to the rapping on this record and will get a little bit squeemish, but it's not all that horrible, especially by nu metal standards. Sure, the triplet flows that close out "Self-Destruction" are out of place, but that does not happen on the rest of the album. In fact, one of the albums better tracks, "FWYTYK", is billed from the start as a rap rock song with a solid build up to a mostly satisfying finish.
Stylistically, the record sounds like a hybrid of your typical Spiritbox worship mixed in with the huge eight string guitar breakdowns of a Mick Gordon video game soundtrack. When you put all of these pieces together, True Power is an album that can hit like a truck, but not consistently, and not in the moments when I Prevail expects you to get hit. Credit to the band for experimenting with sounds and willing to step outside of their comfort zone, but this is not doing it for me. I Prevail have a sound that is promising, but misses the mark structurally in more than enough ways to really hold it back from anything other than mediocre.
Best Songs: There's Fear In Letting Go, Fake, FWYTYK, The Negative
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
It's hard watching a band that you once had so much favour with fall on hard times. Arch Enemy seem to have been on a descending spiral ever since Alissa White-Gluz took over as lead vocalist. Not by any fault of Alissa of course; she has filled in quite admirably for Angela Gossow. It is instead the compositions that have fallen flat in recent years. Arch Enemy have always been a band with some pedestrian song structures in the past, but at least they bothered to make each individual track sound distinct. Now it feels like Arch Enemy is trying to recapture a formula that made them popular fifteen years ago. I swear I heard callbacks to the singles on Doomsday Machine on this album at least half of the songs. Are "Nemesis", "My Apocalypse" and "Taking Back My Soul" good tracks? Yeah, but I want to hear 2022 Arch Enemy; this isn't 2006 anymore!
Compositionally, Arch Enemy have always followed the Dragonforce approach of letting the lead guitar have a very heavy foot, but here they seem less sporadic, which is a nice touch as many of the leads/solos match the tempos/styles of the songs they are associated with. The vocals can seem forced at times thanks in large part to the opening track, "Handshake with Hell". After giving Alissa the opportunity to perform some clean singing here, it's never heard from again on the rest of the album. A little bit more variety here would go a long way for this album, and Arch Enemy moving forward. Overall, it's a solid enough of an Arch Enemy record. They took their time to release following 2017's disastrous Will to Power, and longtime fans will likely enjoy it. It sure as hell won't be deceiving anyone with it's sound, which is why I'm so mixed on it.
Best Songs: Handshake with Hell, The Watcher, Sunset over the Empire, One Last Time
Genres: Death Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I never thought in 20+ years that I would be reviewing an Alexisonfire album on Metal Academy, but here we are!
St. Catherines, Ontario isn't known for a lot of things; lying about ten minutes west of Niagara Falls, it's far enough away from the bustling Toronto area that many of its major attractions are a proverbial "best kept secret". That is except for Alexisonfire. This post-hardcore band have become one of this countries treasures in the rock and alternative communities, even as most south of the border associate us with Justin Bieber and Drake. Their sound can be best described as atmospheric hardcore with hints of metal thrown in as they matured. The dual vocals between Dallas Green and George Pettit sometimes remind me of the dual harmonies of Layne Stayley/William Duvall and Jerry Cantrell oof Alice in Chains albeit more contrapuntal instead of being straight harmonies.
So for the bands first studio album post-hiatus (Old Crows/Young Cardinals was released in 2009), Alexisonfire want to turn back the clock a little bit, while still continuing the trend that later albums hard with more atmospherics and slower tempos. George is screaming more on this record than the sing-scream that ran rampant on Old Crows/Young Cardinals, but I do not feel like they hit with the same intensity or bombast as they should. And I think it comes from Dallas Green of all things. Dallas has always had a smooth, grounded vocal timbre in Alexisonfire, allowing for George's to give more firepower. But here, not only are the clean vocals pushed back in the mix, but they are also swamped out with reverb and other effects that never felt this intrusive. As a result, George's screams feel cheesy and rarely fit with the tunes, even when they are the first set of vocals heard, such as on "Reverse the Curse".
This album does have some questionable moments production wise and most of them are in the mixing of the guitar. I have mentioned in rock albums reviews in recent years that the buzzy, compressed, and overall unflattering sound that has become commonplace thanks to bands like the Black Keys is inescapable, and how no one has been able to pull it off. Even Alexisonfire fall victim to this sound on some of their crossover songs like "Reverse the Curse" and "Sweet Dreams of Otherness", even though their sound is best designed for the open, wall-of-sound approach. That being said, I still enjoy "Reverse the Curse" because Alexisonfire know how to write a hook all these years later. "Survivor's Guilt", "Committed to the Con" and "Dark Night of the Soul" have wonderful crescendo's that culminate in some very nice releases. Even as some tunes (especially the closer "World Stops Turning") get me in that comfy vibe state that the best Alexisonfire songs have always been able to do, a familiar vocal motif does not let these songs turn into background noise.
I was fascinated by a new Alexisonfire record and I was not disappointed. It contains many of their classic traits, while doing enough to make it stand out from the early stuff. The albums best moments are stretched out instead of one track after the other, and even then, they do not live up to the expectations of an album like Crisis. Whether or not this belongs in the Metal Academy...since it sounds so much like previous Alexisonfire records, it's easy to just say no. This is a post-hardcore album through-and-through; a very good post-hardcore album mind you, and I hope this record will open them up to a wider, international audience.
Best Songs: Committed to the Con, Sans Soleil, Conditional Love, Dark Night of the Soul, Reverse the Curse
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
A Much Needed Foundation Before The True Reconstruction
When you live in the moment, it can be impossible to tell what trends are going to kick off and who will be left holding the bag. In the year before BOTH Nirvana made Seattle a hotbed for rock, and Metallica made heavy metal cool, Alice In Chains were laying foundations for both of them. The bands debut album Facelift lays the groundwork for a grunge album with crunchy guitars, but the usage of slower doom grooves, and the vocal stylings of Layne Stayley that can sound familiar to anyone who has listened to Glenn Danzig might give you a different impression.
Right out of the gate, "We Die Young" and "Man in the Box" give off this dichotomy of sounds that are not too dissimilar from one another, but still sound very interesting side by side. One is crunchy and heavy, the other is more melodic and comforting. While later songs, most notably "I Can't Remember" has an introductory riff that sounds like it could have been borrowed out of a Slayer intro circa South of Heaven. And it's all delivered with a cleanliness that is right for mainstream consumption. The dual vocal melodies of Stayley and Jerry Cantrell are splendid and harken back to Bruce Dickinson and the classic Iron Maiden run, albeit much darker and ominous. The guitar and bass riffs are precise and do not steal the thunder from the vocals unless they are called upon, and while the percussion is a little lacking, notably that snare drum that has been thrown through a reverb grinder, the simplicity makes the limited snare usage slightly more bearable.
However the one thing keeping this record down is the lack of direction. You would think with all of these influences that Alice In Chains wears with pride that this band may find a way to be a little bit more experimental. As it is, Facelift is a very safe record as quite a few riffs sound like they are being recycled throughout the record and not in a progressive way. The record sounds good and Alice In Chains have a sound that is all their own here, but they do not have the understanding at this point that each unique song needs variety. As a result, the final third of the album becomes quite tedious and kind of boring to be honest.
All things considered, I never liked Facelift initially. In comparison to what followed, this album felt very pedestrian by AiC's standards, but over time I realized how significant this album was. An album that had so many ideas, but could not execute them properly, seems to be the only reason I can ascertain that Facelift was not THE grunge album of the 90s, and Nevermind was. Same goes for Metallica and their S/T. But those bands owe a lot of their success to Facelift; preparing the landscape for both of their monumental 1991 albums. I wonder if Alice In Chains will do some reconstruction of their own before the next album...
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 1990
The debut album from Oklahoma City based noise rock band Chat Pile reminds me a whole heck of a lot (for some reason) of the first two IDLES albums, Brutalism and Joy As An Act Of Resistance. Perhaps it is in the timbre of the lead vocals that lead to this assertion because not much else about this album reminds me of those first two albums at all. In fact, this album seems more like a hybrid of IDLES' first two albums combined with their art rock stylings of recent. And if you remember my reviews of those later albums (only on RYM), then you'll know that I found them less than thrilling experiences, especially last year's Crawler.
This is a muddy album; perhaps by design given it's noise rock roots, similar to early black midi albums, and this can work in some instances. The biggest problem is that this is more of the bog standard, political post-rock/metal album that I made note of a few weeks ago with the latest Ashenspire album. There is no song structure involved in the execution of these tracks; only free form mesh held together by some of the fakest sounding anger I've heard on a metal album since Korn. By the time I made it to the closing track, "grimace_smoking_weed.jpeg" I felt cold. Like I just gone through a miserable experience like losing the life of someone near and dear to me, but not in the "celebrate and cherish the moments that we got", but rather the feeling of sheer dumbfoundness within moments of hearing/seeing the news play out directly in front of me. This record has no click factor and is further exacerbated by terrible sounding production, mixing and performances. Sometimes this feeling can be rewarding, but here it just feels lifeless. This is an album I have no intention on listening to again.
Best Songs: Tropical Beaches, Inc., The Mask
Genres: Sludge Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
To be honest, I do not understand the current climate in metalcore music. Not that I find all of it to be detestable, but why certain artists get heaps of critical acclaim, but next to no mainstream attention, or vice versa. Alternative metalcore is running wild at the moment as Spiritbox, Northlane, Bad Omens dominate charts, but when I view aggregate scoring lists for metalcore in 2022, I find albums like They Fear Us by London based band, Ithaca.
And upon listening to the album a few times, I can see some potential. I think moreso than anything else, Ithaca are taking a lot of influence from fellow UK metalcore band, Rolo Tomassi. And the comparisons go beyond face value; sure they have a female vocalist who has a decent blend of hardcore screaming and softer singing, but the instrumentals also bring in some more progressive elements, such as uncommon time signatures and unconventional guitar methods. And yet I find this album pretty generic to be frank. The breakdown riffs are formulaic, while the heavier sections cannot find a consistent groove the want to play with. This album finds itself swapping back and forth between Killswitch Engage, August Burns Red and Emmure riffs without doing much to distinguish them, or bring them together. Perhaps Ithaca thought that female vocals would be enough of a stylistic change to push them out, but I just do not hear it.
The production doesn't help much either. As a metalcore album, it has a strong preference to amplify the chugging guitars and Djamila's harsh vocals. Even during the softer, post-metal interludes, bass is not allowed to breathe over the top of some very nice sounding guitar chords and clean signing. The percussion does some heavier lifting with its standard kick heavy mix, but many times those kick drum lines actually run counter to the guitar chugging, a nice touch and gave me something to really focus on during the breakdowns.
The final two tracks of this record, "You Should Have Gone Back" and "Hold, Be Held" try for a "post-metalcore" sound, very much Greyhaven in influence. And I wonder why Ithaca did not go for this kind of sound more consistently throughout the album. The song structures, while not perfect, are a lot better here than earlier on in the record. As a whole, it tries to be a number of different bands at the same time, but cannot balance them all properly, and it ends up sounding like a mess.
Best Songs: The Future Says Thank You, Number Five, Fluorescent
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
2022 has been a surprisingly good year for post-rock so far. Perhaps this year was a bad one to finally hang up the reviewing jacket since it was, in fact, post-rock that eventually led to my departure in the first place. 2021 was such a boring year for all different styles of post-rock and adjacent music. Leave it to Black Country, New Road and foxtails in hardcore punk to give me one final hurrah at the start of this year before being swamped with a bunch of indistinguishable mush and my eventual departure.
Of course, it was likely that post-metal would have to get involved in this somehow. And since my review retirement did not include heavy metal, I figured I would give the new Ashenspire album, Hostile Architecture, a spin or two. And as much as I do not want to admit it, it is albums just like this one that distanced me from the critical world of album reviews.
Let's start off with the positives because there are a lot of them. The production of this album is splendid. This album has great chemistry between the guitars and bass lines. I personally found the guitars to sound a little groggy during the heavy chugging passages, but an album like this does not focus on metalcore adjacent breakdowns and mixing very much. The percussion is top notch, borrowing a lot from black metal with some ferocious blast beat patterns that do not become overbearing. While the vocals did take a little bit of time to get used to, I found them to be quite strong, especially with the precise pronunciation and diction. And I would be remised if I didn't mention the quasi jazz saxophone solos that appear on this record sporadically. The horns sound dark and full instead of the brighter sounds that run rampant on a number of recent metal albums, from bands such as White Ward.
But my biggest issue with this album is the content. Now look, I'm not going to come on here and bash the album for its timeliness and cringe inducing lyricism; especially sine it is coming from a political point of view that I abandoned a long time ago. But let's compare it to Ants From Up There by Black Country, New Road from earlier this year. That album was not necessarily political, but it had an arc surrounding it that was brought forth in the music. Hooks were sparse, but small vocal motifs were allowed to resonate and give them a quiet anthemic feel. By comparison sake, Hostile Architecture doesn't have motifs either, but the vocals are so flustered and all over the place that they don't provide the listener with any sort of anthemic power. To me, the vocals of Hostile Architecture sound like a sermon; a sermon that I hopelessly tuned out of as early as "Béton Brut".
There is a reason why Rage Against the Machine's music is so poignant to this day, and it's not because of the messaging. It's the timelessness of it all, plus the quick jabs during their choruses are so instantly anthemic. Ashenspire created an album here that has populism, and you could make the argument that the vocals are delivered with power, but the precision is severely lacking. I would like this album more if it was just an instrumental one.
Best Songs: Plattenbau Persphone Praxis, Tragic Heroin, Apathy as Arsenic Lethargy as Lead
Genres: Avant-Garde Metal Progressive Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I think I shocked myself more than anyone else when I listened to, and enjoyed Imperial Triumphant's 2020 album Alphaville. It was technical death metal, but of the heavily avant-garde variety. It may have been the closest thing that you may possibly imagine if the term "progressive jazz metal" were to be formulated. The combination of uncommon song structures, heavily dissonant riffage, obtuse lyricism and horn instrumentation that sounds borrowed straight from free jazz is a sound that should not work...and yet it did.
And so it should come as no surprise that we find ourselves here. Spirit of Ecstasy, despite it's avant-garde genre tag, is not that far removed from the multitude of technical death metal bands with their songwriting techniques. In fact, I would define this record as being the one that most closely resembles technical death metal. And my goodness what an album it turned out to be! Spirit of Ecstasy is a more thought provoking album than Alphaville and does so by going for a sound that is still demanding, but somehow more accessible and more tuneful than ever before.
First and foremost, the jazzy fusion elements of Alphaville are lacking in quantity and are instead replaced by more classical inspired passages perhaps borrowed from the Igor Stravinsky playbook. The ending of "Merkurius Gilded", the entirety of the quasi instrumental "Bezumnaya"; these tracks are hauntingly beautiful. The heaviness of the grooves on "Chump Change", "Metrovertigo" and "Tower of Glory, City of Shame" are heart stopping. While the first real incorporation of jazzy horns takes place on "Merkurius Gilded", and the instrumental "In The Pleasure of Their Company" sounds like a free form jazz solo. All of this seems like it would be overwhelming for someone like myself, and yet Imperial Triumphant never lose sight of their identity on this record. It is quite the marvel and well worth hearing just for this.
The technicality is not meant to be used as a shield for bad compositions. Instead, it furthers them by exemplifying this records most chilling moments. This unfortunately brings us into the lyrics. And look, Imperial Triumphant have a way with words on this album that is quite impressive; resorting to high brow references instead of spelling it out for the listener. But when the words are so important to the compositions, why on earth would they be pushed back so far into the mix? I cannot see a discernable reason for this beyond "it just want tech-death bands do" and I'm not buying it.
But if you can overlook that, you will find an album of immense quality. I'm not sure how much of it I would listen to outside of a full album experience, but Imperial Triumphant are further developing their identity beyond a bog standard tech-death formula and I cannot wait to see where this band takes their sound next.
Best Songs: Chump Change, Tower of Glory, City of Shame, Death on a Highway, In the Pleasure of Their Company
Genres: Avant-Garde Metal Death Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
How does one discover metal in the modern day? I think in some regards, heavy metal is more elitist than some of us could even imagine even ten years ago with how wild some of it can get. While the mid 2000s were brim with the early stages of scene emo culture with pop punk from My Chemical Romance and a resurgent Green Day, my local alternative radio station (it still does) had a metaphorical boner for the early 90s and more importantly, the grunge era. I don’t need to elaborate further but just the names: Peral Jam, Soundgarden, Screaming Trees are legendary.
Of course, one would be remised if they didn’t mention Nirvana. And so here is the mention: I never liked Nirvana in the same way as those other grunge bands. I’m sure my story is not that dissimilar to many others, but I grew up in a household that was dominated by soft adult contemporary music and pop adjacent music of the 90s boy bands. So, when I gave my parents a more than reasonable excuse to listen to anything with a rock edge, and they refused, well then it became obvious where much of my attention to alternative counterculture derived from. But it stems even further than that. Everyone loved Nirvana when I was an adolescent, but I always found their music so squeaky clean and commercialized and lacked a lot of substance. To this day, I hold Nevermind as one of the most overrated albums of all time, right alongside the entirety of AC/DC’s discography. Say what you will about the over compressed mess that is In Utero, but it has some of Nirvana’s most essential tracks, not to mention their dark undertones.
I bring all of this up as preamble because you need to know exactly why Alice in Chains’ Dirt is the pinnacle of the grunge era. This record is dark, gloomy, depressive, nihilistic and sombre. And it does it all with a level of comfort that is among one of my favourite heavy metal records. Hearing Dirt by Alice in Chains must have been a similar feeling for me to how those who experienced the first Black Sabbath album must have felt.
And that comparison is not devoid of context. Unlike the other grunge bands of the 90s, Alice in Chains were not afraid of the slower, brooding song styles. While bands like Nirvana were becoming more accessible on Nevermind, and Pearl Jam were releasing Ten, Alice in Chains were traversing the pits. They were not contempt with shout-along choruses, and without that specific focus, Dirt might turn out to have more memorable chorus lines than the other grunge bands. Listening to an Alice in Chains album was all about wallowing in the sadness and the insurmountable weight of the lyrics of “Rain When I Die”, “Down in a Hole”, “Rooster” or the closer “Would?”. Unlike Nirvana, who wrote songs about…literally nothing, these words meant something very dear to our protagonist/narrator, and that emotion can be felt by at least one listener with the same intensity.
Perhaps a lack of knowledge surrounding doom metal at the time of the discovery of Dirt may lead to some contrasting opinions surrounding this album, especially on this website. While doom metal is heavily driven by melody, there is a short list of classic doom metal albums that I can recall that use the hook as effectively as this. And of course, these hooks would not be possible without the contributions of Layne Stayley. The vocals are magical in their contour and performed with an attention to detail that cannot be overstated. While calling the timbre “clean” might be accurate, hearing the solo howls during “Rooster” and “Would?” evoke a true sense of realism and gravitas. When these passages are complemented by the background vocals of Jerry Cantrell, it creates pure bliss.
Now with this being lumped in with the grunge crowd during the early 1990s, it is easy to say that the instrumental work is underwhelming. And this is probably true. The riffage is chunky and the melody is almost exclusively given to Stayley’s vocals. But it’s how the instrumental compliments the vocals that make Dirt a cut above the rest. It might not be as contrapuntal as early Soundgarden albums but makes up for that in unity. There is a sense of…completion in the composition of “Hate To Feel”, “Would?” and “Rain When I Die” that Soundgarden and Pearl Jam never had. Soundgarden would figure it out later with Superunkown, but Alice In Chains found it many years earlier.
I mentioned in my review of The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here how I felt that Alice in Chains fans were far too reactionary (I hate that word but cannot find a suitable replacement) towards William Duvall and the AiC reunion. Too many fans view this band as sacred ground and having a reunion without Stayley's corpse would be heresy. It’s very similar to the backlash received by the Star Wars sequel movies. But they all deserve a chance. And while most of them fail (Star Wars) I for one am glad Alice in Chains returned in the 2010s. But upon further analysis and revisiting this record all these years later, I must admit that the Stayley traditionalists do make a solid point: Alice in Chains is not the same without Layne Stayley. The majesty of the first two records cannot go underappreciated and its influence on the Duvall records is essential. But Dirt is more than just an influential juggernaut. It might not be the best metal album, but it is without a doubt the most important record for me. I wish I could return to those blissful days of blasting this album in my room, high as fuck, and getting lost in the world. Which begs the question: if I would, could you?
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 1992
I am far more forgiving towards Doom metal's stepbrother, Sludge metal. And in theory it makes a lot of sense why: why not combine the excellent songwriting capabilities of Doom with the exceeding aggression of thrash and hardcore punk? It's like a dream come true! Furthermore, the introduction of atmospheric sludge metal with bands like Neurosis and ISIS are huge influences in the bands that I enjoy, but even the more traditional stuff; from the Melvins and early Mastodon are excellent.
So it was nice to hear from a sludge metal band who were not about to take me on an hour long post-metal trip. But man was I not expecting this. Sure it still sounds very atmospheric; riffs such as "Those Years, Condemned" sound taken right out of a blackgaze handbook. but interspersed among doom and post-metal passages are quasi metalcore breakdowns! I cannot say I am fully surprised by this since -core has found its way into many styles of metal in recent years, especially with its current Djent revival.
Compositionally, Páthos is a progressive album with all of its style changes, but it somehow manages to keep a consistent flow all through the album. It's heaviest moments are given delicate preparation before the tremolo picking guitars, howling vocals and double bass/blast beat percussion take over. The breakdowns do not sound that far removed from the original riffage; really only diverging by replacing long sustained guitar chords with palm muted ones. The only truly striking moment was the clean vocals on "All You Will Remember". These harsh vocals are hellish, especially the highs, so bringing the album back down to earth with clean singing was a nice touch...only for the band to never return to them. These softer post-rock sections on "In Your Wake" would make excellent vocal breaks instead of becoming texture pieces.
This is the kind of doom metal album that I could vibe to unironically and enjoy immensely. However, the metalcore influences does bring its fair share of production issues. It is not worth it to go through them all, but the biggest culprits are an unhealthy dose of overproduced double kick pedals, a less than flattering low end in the form of guitars doubling bass lines instead of instrumental independence, and some less than impressive breakdowns in general. I guess they sound fine in the context of each individual piece, but throw away the progressive songwriting and uncommon time signatures during the breakdowns and its a typical 5-7-8 riff.
This record reminds me of 2018's Iris by Canadian death doom band Altars of Grief. Both are in genres that I frequent and enjoy and each has a unique sound to them that separates themselves from contemporaries. But they are both held back by production choices that have been brought over from a previous influence. While it is still unclear what will happen to my fellow countrymen in Altars of Grief, Conjurer will more than suffice to quench my thirst for progressive doom metal.
Best Tracks: It Dwells, All You Will Remember, Those Years, Condemned, Cracks in the Pyre
Genres: Sludge Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I do not know if this opening statement is meant to invoke a positive reaction, but I'm going to say it anyway: the Deftones know how to create music that sounds like the inside of a hotboxed room. Coming into this album, Deftones have established themselves in the ever growing nu metal scene of the late 1990s and easily one of the styles most mature acts at that. So imagine the shock of so many Deftones fans during 2000 when tracks like "Digital Bath", "Change (In the House of Flies)" and "Rx Queen" take center stage instead of "Back to School (Mini Maggit)" or "Elite".
But I still cannot help but be completely infatuated by it! For an album that is so hazy, there is a certain cleanliness to it that I cannot comprehend how it got to this position. Yeah, some guitars on "Street Carp" and "Passenger" sound like they were twisted too much by an EQ filter, but there is some fascinating a poignant bass lines that compliment both the guitar as well as the slow but precise percussion. Chino's breathy vocal stylings are back and with a vengeance. Vocals tend to slur into one another during the records lighter moments, such as the acoustic "Teenager" and other soft verses. But the words are not emboldened with more reverb; they actually sound quite...acoustic. And that also helps the louder passages where Chino can accentuate and shout more, which are cleaner and gives the listener something to focus on.
Unlike many bands trying to evoke the drug-induced coma through their music, Deftones pull it off by actually including tunes in the songs. Repetition has always been the name of the game, but not one track on this album outstays its welcome. Each melody is unique, even as some of the albums timbre stagnates through tracks. It becomes comfortable, almost as if it could be played under any situation. It's good for working out, dinner music, relaxing and sleeping. In this regard, White Pony can be viewed as the "tune up" or as a more accessible version of Tool's Lateralus. Only fitting since Maynard appears for uncredited guest vocals on "Passenger". It might take a few tracks to really lock into a groove, but once it gets there, in the words of Chino on "Knife Prty" "I could float here forever".
Best Songs: Digital Bath, Rx Queen, Street Carp, Teenager, Knife Prty, Passenger, Change (In the House of Flies), Pink Maggit
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2000
I must admit, I was worried about this album when I first started listening to it. Something about it's extended runtime that was not helped at all by the inclusion of a thirty minute closer. But then as I reached the end, what I found myself appreciating was those final two tracks more so than the four shorter tracks that precede them. Don't get me wrong, "Orchard" and "Feral Bones" are quite good, and the acoustic "Evergreen" was a nice change of style, but they always felt like glorified interludes; stylistically they could have been reduced in size. But then again, I could say the same thing about the albums final two tracks, but that would take away from the hypnotic atmosphere that they contain. "Cassock" has nice simmer and dynamic growth, but "Boleskine" adds a hard song structure/form to adhere to. The very monotonous and hypnotic motif modulates through the first half of the track before finding a steady ground for it to fade out over an absurdly long timeframe. The production of the guitars can be hit or miss as they do clip the mix frequently, but the fuzziness of it all gives it the impression of a stoner metal album, and fuzzy distortion like this is not uncommon in stoner music. In fact, it usually bolsters the record.
I hear the pieces of a great album, but can truly only enjoy a record such as this from a distance. Stoner metal has never really been my thing, but structurally it is far more impressive than many other albums in this style. What holds it back is the Deadmau5 approach to songwriting of using sixteen bar phrases instead of eight. Windhand could have said the same amount in a shorter amount of time and it would have been great.
Best Songs: Orchard, Feral Bones, Evergreen, Boleskine
Genres: Doom Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2013
So far in 2022, I've moved away from the high brow critic spheres and narrowed my new listening to styles/genres that I already have a vested interest in. One of those genres, obviously, is heavy metal and last month I cleared out my back catalogue of popular alternative and metalcore records that I skipped over in the first half of the year (Northlane, Bad Omens, Static Dress, etc.). But along came Thornhill who were getting much attention in critic spaces, but not so much in the mainstream. The can usually only mean one thing: Deftones.
I've been revisiting a lot of Deftones in recent weeks as well (White Pony review is coming soon). And yes, Heroine by Thornhill does emit many of the songwriting tropes that are iconic from the early 2000s era Deftones circa White Pony, as well as some more modern, popular releases like Koi no yokan and Diamond Eyes. But something about this record feels different; like a record that knows its source material down to its seams, but can build it back up with different materials and still have it fit. Djent-y breakdowns are popular at the moment, and this record does a solid job of not allowing them to feel slapdash or thrown in just for the sake of trendchasing.
The album is really dreamy and lush and helped in large part by a production that does not favour one instrumental over the other. Lots of atmospheric music fails at being so when bands give prominence to one part over the rest giving it a jarring effect that snaps the listener right back to reality. But this album's real star? Vocalist Jacob Charlton. This vocal timbre is splendid. The way in which Charlton accents uncommon syllables and releases stanzas prematurely adds a layer of roughness to this record that Deftones albums just don't with Chino's clean delivery drowned out in reverb and other effects. It's almost reminiscent of Muse's Matt Bellamy, but with much better fundamentals beneath it.
This is a great album. The Deftones elements are great and hold the original source material to its purest form, but divergences are precise and not forced. This is a name that I look forward to keeping an ear open for years to come.
Best Songs: Leather Wings, Blue Velvet, Casanova, Hollywood, Heroine
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Finding death metal that isn't of the melodic variety has become quite the challenging task in recent years. Too many times the musicians rely solely on tonal and structural dissonance in order to make the music sound as vicious as possible. But what these artists fail to realize is that being engulfed by texture and the sonic equivalent of mush may be exciting, how am I supposed to listen to this outside of the mosh pit? Without any structure, many of these songs just become lifeless. Perhaps my experience with more melodic sounding music has left me numb to the endless chugging, blast beats and breakdowns, and begging for some kind of sustenence.
There are exceptions, one such is the Daniel Corchado solo project, The Chasm. Records such as Light of the Infraworld were melodic enough to at least give a number of tracks on the album some staying power, while still not pulling any punches during the traditional death metal passages. And in 2022, The Scars of a Lost Reflective Shadow goes to show how melodic tendencies can be interwoven into heavier, technical death metal frameworks and still sound good! Although I will admit some of this record is sounding pretty formulaic for The Chasm as they try to incorporate more true progressive passages into their work.
Like with Light of the Infraworld, this album starts off with an instrumental, "Return of the End (The Ancient Spirit that Makes me Aware)", but this time The Chasm has included three unique instrumentals. The first, "The Constellations Stagger" has a pretty standard death metal groove, while the lead guitar carriers a pretty good motif, while the second "The Paths that Lead to the Abysm" is a death-thrash stomper. The guitars providing simple motifs are expected, but having some melodic foundational device gives it a momentum boost. And for a track that is one of the album's shortest that can only be a good sign.
The rest is okay. Like I mentioned earlier, this album is all ready to start dropping some progressive tendencies as early as "A Keen but Empty Sight" and they can start to get repetitive after a while as songs modulate from black metal open tremolo guitars, slow doom-y "melodies" and thrash/death palm muted guitar and skank beat drums. From a production standpoint, I enjoy how open it all sounds with the guitars not being compressed like ass and giving the bass some presence in the mix. The percussion sounds decent, except for the kick drum, which ever so slightly fade in and out of time whenever performing a double kick passage. In the end, it doesn't affect the outcome of the track, but it can be disorienting and distracting if you listen through headphones. Daniel's vocals are much improved over previous The Chasm album's as well; I once claimed them as scrappy, but here they fit the mold. Maybe a little bit on the restrained side and therefore hard to make out without a lyric sheet in front of you, but the tone is there.
I like The Chasm and this record as well. My adventure's into more of the technical side of death metal has not produced too many positive results in recent years, but The Chasm are here to fill some of that void. I wish more groups were willing to be as daring with their blending of melodic/technical soundscapes as The Chasm and Allegaeon are.
Genres: Death Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
This record is highly conflicting for me. On one hand, I can certainly hear the appeal and excitement coming out of this Indian nu metal act. With plenty of experience hearing oriental music in both progressive and black metal spheres, I really enjoy the specific Indian musical timbres of the flutes, sitars and various percussion. It gives this group more than enough unique qualities to stand out from any number of nu metal acts from the late 90s/early 2000s as well as the queue line of disposable acts in the modern age. I also really enjoy how these tones are used over a more traditional pop song structure instead of resorting to elongated forms of more dense subgenres. I could see this record serving as a bridging point from mainstream alternative metalcore to folk metal and later on, black metal.
On the other hand, this album can get pretty cringy at times. I think the most blatant is the rap vocals that are usually performed in English instead of the traditional Hindi that is explored throughout the albums choruses. Many of the punchlines are really embarrassing if I'm being honest. Actually, now that I think about it, the vocal performances all around are not very impressive. The main vocals sound like Slipknot's Corey Taylor as they float in and out between harsh singing and the occasional screaming. The rap vocals are more spoken than Slipknot, but that allows for the vocals to be pronounced and focused on, which as mentioned before, is not necessarily a good thing. Otherwise, the mixing runs quite flat as the bass is given next to no focus. The guitars are so bloated and blocky that nothing else is allowed to breathe.
I can tell that this record is not meant for me, even as I found myself trying to vibe with it. Maybe back in the day before I dug into the rabbit hole of folk metal I may have this more enjoyable. In the modern day, the production is lousy and the English vocals are actively distracting. Still, the usage of Indian folk instrumentation and compositions are fresh and unique. I would still recommend it just for the novelty of it all, but I hope other conventional metal bands from around the world take notes from this in the future.
Best Songs: Zanjeero Se, Jee Veerey, Yaad
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Greyhaven are attempting to fill a void that has been missing for the last five years following the final Dillinger Escape Plan album and they succeed in a mostly enjoyable way. It may be a little bit too much on the technical side of mathcore for my liking (think Every Time I Die), but this record saves a lot of its more memorable moments for the back half.
Best Songs: All Candy, Of Snakes and Swans, Fed to the Lights, And It's Still Too Loud
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I graduated from my post-secondary music program in 2013. I did not need this stark reminder towards all of the non-songs and guitar wankery that I had to endure during that time. This record is saved by its production and top notch performances. Even then, the performances are not as impressive this time around, but what strikes me most of all is that I cannot remember a goddamned thing about the album. To me, Parrhesia is musical nothingness; an impressive display of tones and frequencies that float in one ear and quickly exit out the other just as fast as Animals as Leaders modulate through arpeggio patterns and non-existent forms. At this point, it might be best to assume The Joy of Motion was a one off project and this band is back to their boring ways.
Best Songs: Gestaltzerfall, The Problem of Other Minds
Genres: Progressive Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Given the fact that Static Dress wear this influences on their sleeve on this debut album, it should not come as any surprise that I sense a warm feeling of nostalgia here. It has elements of Deftones/Hum, Chevelle, and mid 2000s post-hardcore/metalcore Underoath. I may not have listened to Underoath back in the day, but their sound is relatively timely and can be felt in a lot of post-hardcore music that I hold in high regard today. The album is heavy with breakdowns, quasi emo lyricism, Chevelle style vocal timbre and Deftones stylings of atmospherics and possibly shoegaze on occasions.
At first I may have been a little hesitant to call this album great. And this is primarily due to a wide variety of styles and influences that it could be seen as nearly impossible to balance them out fairly, while still creating a new sound that is not completely dependent on nostalgia farming. But Static Dress pull it off very well; this record takes all these influences together to create an entirely new sound that is not only fresh and exciting, but also exhilarating. If any of the non-metalcore influences of this group peak your interest, then this record might have something new for you. Otherwise, those mid 2000s Underoath fans will have a great time with this.
Best Songs: fleahouse, Push rope, ...Maybe!!?, Marisol, cubicle dialogue
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I must admit, I was less than impressed by the new Bad Omens album when I heard it initially. The record has quite a drastic whiplash effect that I was not prepared for, nor did I want in my alternative metalcore album. The first half of the record is solid with bangers like "CONCRETE JUNGLE" "Nowhere To Go" and "THE DEATH OF PEACE OF MIND". But about halfway through the record, Bad Omens hit a detour and split the second half between more alt-metalcore and quasi Billie Eilish elctropop and cyber metal.
At first it was very strange as these ideas were kept mostly isolated from one another. You would no doubt hear elements of the atmospheric electronics and synths during the softer verses on the first half, but then the record throws the dichotomy out the window and produces full blown elctropop songs like "bad decisions" and "somebody else." "What do you want from me?" might be the most interesting track on the album as it goes more cyber metal. This leaves the last two tracks "ARTIFICIAL SUICIDE" and "Miracle" to close out the album on an odd note. The former is a alt-metalcore slammer while the later is a hybrid of sorts. I thought "What do you want from me?" was the hybrid to close out the album, but the last two tracks came out of nowhere and left the record feeling unfinished.
Upon repeated listens however, I started noticing other elements. Mostly production wise, where the alternative metalcore sound that has become popularized by Bring Me The Horizon makes its presence felt early. However, unlike so many BMTH clones (and even BMTH themselves) Bad Omens are pretty decent songwriters with a knack for productive flare. Sure the kick drum is overpowered and the guitar/bass independence is severely lacking, but the melodies are fruitful, the vocals don't take a backseat to instrumental wanking, and the -core breakdowns are sparse, making each one, especially on the back half with its fewer metal tracks, feel rewarding to the listener. That being said, the album runs a tad too long, the final two tracks feel like addendum's to the real closer "What do you want from me?" and leave the album feeling unfinished as a whole, and the songs "Like A Villain" and "IDWT$" are a little too cringy for my taste.
Bad Omens do not have to worry about the wrath of metal fans rejecting them for commercializing since they were already here from the start. And I appreciate the progression that Bad Omens put on display with THE DEATH OF PEACE OF MIND. It's a solid listen for alternative metalcore fans, but structural issues and a lackluster back half may keep you from enjoying it any more.
Best Songs: CONCRETE JUNGLE, Nowhere To Go, THE DEATH OF PEACE OF MIND, Just Pretend, Somebody else.
Genres: Alternative Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
I'm not really getting the division among critics about this new Enterprise Earth album. I've seen a few music reviewers online praise this album as an early album of the year contender, while RateYourMusic sings in unison about how many chunks this album blows. The main criticisms this album has received is how it follows the trend in modern deathcore of having atrocious production like Emmure and Brand of Sacrifice. And while those criticisms are more than justified here, in comparison to those bands, as well as Infant Annihilator, nothing here is grossly offensive. It's technical wankery for sure and the excessive use of djent breakdowns is far from ideal, but there are some well constructed tracks on the front half of the album that use breakdowns efficiently without resorting to brutality. They can also write a decent melodic hook when they put in the effort.
That being said, the record runs absurdly long and with the melodic tracks being few and far between, I found myself skipping tracks as early as the second listen. The traditional deathcore passages on "Reanimate//Disintegrate" and "You Couldn't Save Me" have been done to death and I never liked them initially. This is mid tier deathcore that isn't worth hating and would likely be better if the band stuck with what they knew. The problem? This is album number four from Enterprise Earth and they still haven't figured this out yet. If there is any reason to be hesitant on this record, it should be that.
Best Songs: Unleash Hell, I Have To Escape, Legends Never Die, My Blood, Their Satiation
Genres: Metalcore
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Black metal is still not my strong suit, despite what my recent listenings and review counter might suggest. So when I reviewed 2019's Hallucionogen and praised it as a great album, I knew that Blut aus Nord were a well respected atmo black metal act, but I was not expecting the drastic change in direction that the band has traversed over those twenty-five years. While the electronics are still undoubtedly Blut aus Nord, they have evolved over time from dungeon synth to ambient, industrial and psychedelia.
That last one is the most fascinating since the last record felt like a psychedelic trip while listening to it. It also seems to have attracted the fancy of Blut aus Nord since their new album, Disharmmonium - Undreamable Abysses, is doubling down on the psychedelics once again. In fact, one could listen to this record and call it Blut aus Nord by way of Oranssi Pazuzu!
That comparison goes even beyond the heavy psych comparison. the harmonic progression of this album is quite obtuse as well. Given the atonal qualities of songs like "Tales Of The Old Dreamer" and "Neptune's Eye", one might have a hard time believing that band did not have a hand involved with this. But Blut aus Nord manage to keep their etheral roots as these soundscapes are gorgeous! The melodic leads are not drowned out by an wacky, progressive song style or excessive percussive elements. The bass lines are not the most fruitful I've heard, hell they aren't even the most fruitful on a Blut aus Nord album, but they have some genuine heft, which is highly beneficial to this albums production since the percussion does not contain the same aforementioned weight. Kick drum is slightly overmixed, but a lot of the cymbal work is lacking. A thick underlying bass to emphasize chord or style changes compliments extremely well. As for the vocals, they are severely lacking, but the little bit of it we do get is fine enough; it's more Lovecraft-ian worship, but rather a commentary of those works rather than just a retread, which I enjoyed diving into.
It's almost ironic that Blut aus Nord released Hallucionogen around the same time another French based ABM band, The Great Old Ones, released their Lovecraft-ian work Cosmicism. To compare them is fair game in my opinion and Blut aus Nord stepped their game up here. This is a band that could release whatever they want and still get a passing grade from many music critics in the extreme metal sphere, but Blut aus Nord created the superior album here. The Great Old Ones made a great ABM record, Blut aus Nord crafted an experience with Disharmonium - Undreamable Abysses.
Best songs: Chants Of The Deep Ones, Tales Of The Old Dreamer, Neptune's Eye, That Cannon Be Dreamed, The Apotheosis of The Unnamable
Genres: Black Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022
Progressive metal has challenges that other genres of metal do not have to comply with. And the biggest one for me has always been "how far off the deep end can an song/album go before it becomes too much and 'inaccessible'?" The debut record from out non-human overlords brought to focus the prog problem that myself and many of my music graduate class refer to as "the Berklee album". Berklee is one of, if not the most respected and revered post-secondary music program in North America and it produces some incredible talent across all genres of music. The issue is that no one who comes out of Berklee knows how to write a song properly. Animals as Leaders has the chops, but lacks any sense of dynamic growth or memorability for the listener. These records feel more like projects for the artists themselves rather than the audience.
Well in five years Animals as Leaders took these criticisms to heart and finally released The Joy of Motion. This album defines itself apart from other AAL records by incorporating melody and dynamic growth, while still maintaining what makes a record such as this the possession of Animals as Leaders. At no time throughout the record is someone not playing a consistent string of notes, whether that be in the percussion or a technical guitar ostinato pattern. What forces these songs to stand out is that these ostinato's are not at the forefront. Leads on "The Future That Awaited Me" and "Air Chrysalis" are slow and compliment the other parts brilliantly. Furthermore, the way that these leads build and mutate over time is splendid since they don't feel as if they were two separate ideas loosely tied together with silly string.
What matters most to me is that this record isn't boring. It does contain a plethora of Animals as Leaders tropes, but each track has its own unique style to it making it a much easier album to digest than the bands previous two records. Still, I noticed a considerable drop off in attention to finer details on the final three tracks after "Para Mexer". Perhaps it was proggy/djent fatigue that kicked in, but I would have been contempt after just nine tracks. They aren't bad per se, but they de feel like deep cuts, thrown on to the back of an album to pad runtime. Either way, this album is a joyous listen and the motion of head bopping is infectious.
Best songs: Kascade, Air Chrysalis, Another Year, Physical Education, The Future That Awaited Me, Para Mexer
Genres: Progressive Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2014
I think I share the same sentiment as others when they saw The Pact... by Negative Plane show up on the front page of RYM listed as a black metal album. At least in terms of what we in the 21st century anticipate what black metal is supposed to sound like, Negative Plane are about to throw your expectations out the window. This is more of a straightforward heavy metal album with some heavier elements that may be perceived as the extreme metal grandchild of black metal. But for me, this record feels more like a nostalgic trip back to extreme metal's roots, with the biggest influences being early records by Venom and Slayer.
As for the quality of the record, it does show a lot of ambition to not just be a straight clone of Venom's Welcome to Hell or Slayer's Show No Mercy. The riffage of the guitar is simplistic and does show signs of the early power metal influence on this records bookend tracks "A Work to Stand a Thousand Years" as well as "And so It Came to Pass". When the vocals stand aside, the guitars take their place with melodic leads that are not flashy. Solo's are sparse, which makes the rare transitions into those higher registers alarming and welcoming on an album that is primarily groove centric. The bass is understandably weak as many early extreme albums typically would be and lacking in rhythmic independence. It is the percussion that I find the most interesting, as it does contain an abundance of rhythmic independence from the melodic instruments. While guitars and bass remain stagnant for extended periods of time, the percussion is alternating back and forth between power metal grooves and black metal blast beats. The dynamic is striking and very well executed.
The vocals are not the best, but they do contribute where they need to. The howling fits right in with the very traditional black metal themes of the occult and satanic worship. Unlike Tom Araya, these vocals are given time to resonate with the listener allowing them to comprehend what is being said and with decent enough annunciation of the syllables. They blend well with the instrumental and do not deter from the rest of the compositions.
Structurally the album is quite flawed and right out of the gate you may have already figured out why. As the album is a nostalgic trip back to the early 1980s and the true roots of extreme metal (not the Norwegian 2nd wave of the 1990s), the blending is hit or miss. When the album tries to get a little extreme, it can sometimes be held back by an abundantly cheery guitar lead. The inverse also applies. Furthermore, the album runs quite long, leaving more than half of these seven songs feeling like they run out of steam by the end; five of the seven tracks are over eight minutes, and the bookends of this record both surpass ten. As a result, the album suffers the same issue that many modern progressive metal acts have to deal with; having too much content that isn't focused enough.
But in the end, I can't say that I hated this. The Pact... presents a very different side of the black metal landscape that is seldom discussed or given the time of day because it isn't brutal enough. It's the kind of black metal album that I imagine hundreds of elite music critics would have panned back in the 1980s, but would quickly turn around on once they witnessed first hand its influence. I don't think The Pact... will be influential in the same way that Venom or Darkthrone were, but it is quality and the nostalgia is not just for show.
Best Songs: Poison and the Crucifix, Three Turns to the West, And so It Came to Pass
Genres: Black Metal
Format: Album
Year: 2022