Spread the Disease - We Bleed From Many Wounds (1998)Release ID: 40996

Spread the Disease - We Bleed From Many Wounds (1998) Cover
Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / March 15, 2023 / Comments 0 / 0

Metal's entryway into the hardcore in the 90s was often sadly forgotten. From the beginning to the end of that decade, metalcore bands back then failed to make global impact, only leaving behind templates for recent bands to use. I'm glad to be following this scene despite being 20 years too late. Spread the Disease's debut We Bleed from Many Wounds is an interesting emphasis on the metal in metalcore. Though it's not without a few hardcore screamo tricks that a few of the more metallic bands use...

I would certainly consider this album early metal/deathcore, but it's not enough. There are plenty of black/death metal structures and background keyboards without being pinned into both genres. The vocals are filled with gravelly hellfire to the likes of other bands in the extreme metal/hardcore category. Spread the Disease's riffing style is different though. While a few riffs sound punky, the rest of them show a lot of their Slayer influence. Most of the hardcore association actually comes from the band being signed to Eulogy Recordings, run by Morning Again's John Wylie. I'm guessing he must've given Spread the Disease the idea of a few hardcore riffs added to their metal.

"Quarantine" would've fit well for me 4 months before this review when I was in COVID quarantine, and it has the early deathcore sound later used by Despised Icon. "In Progress We Swallow" has some parts that remind me of the more early hardcore side of Candiria and Sikth, while unleashing the usual deathly metalcore. Midway through "Her Severed Head" is some Possessed/Slayer-like riffing, alongside occasional tremolos. The breakdowns hit hard without ever ruining everything.

"Shatter the Bolt" is a true 7-minute epic highlight. It has a bit of the melodic part of the sound planting a seed for Unearth and Trivium. Starting "Hymn for the Unheard" is some black metal riffing. "Origin" has a more technical deathcore sound that would spawn deathly bands like Origin and more hardcore bands like Born of Osiris.

Things get quieter in "Ephemerae" in the middle of its chaos. I really like this balancing contrast. "A Love Song" brings in some melodic metalcore/deathcore riffing that would be like a instrumental mix of Memphis May Fire and Chelsea Grin over a decade before those bands began their careers. "Common Grounds" is one last look towards the metalcore/deathcore sound that's much different from that of Attila.

We Bleed From Many Wounds is a pretty good debut for this band. A nice appealing way to add extreme into metallic hardcore in the late 90s ahead of time, though you might get a little sick of it in repeated listens. Sadly, this band remains deep in the forgotten hardcore/metal limbo. They distanced themselves from the plaguing trends of bands going as hardcore as Rorschach and Deadguy or as metallic as Slayer and At the Gates. They only take a bit of the energy of those bands enough to solidify their unique dark metal/hardcore sound. It's an interesting spawn point for the genre deathcore, and much better structured than their second and final album the following year....

Favorites: "In Progress We Swallow", "Shatter the Bolt", "Origin", "A Love Song"

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Release info

Release Site Rating

Ratings: 1 | Reviews: 1

3.5

Release Clan Rating

Ratings: 1 | Reviews: 1

3.5

Cover Site Rating

Ratings: 2

2.3

Cover Clan Rating

Ratings: 1

3.5
Release
We Bleed From Many Wounds
Year
1998
Format
Album
Clans
The Revolution
Genres
Metalcore
Sub-Genres

Metalcore (conventional)

Voted For: 1 | Against: 0

Deathcore

Voted For: 1 | Against: 0

Spread the Disease chronology

We Bleed From Many Wounds (1998)
Sheer Force of Inertia (1999)