Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Car Bomb - w^w^^w^w (2012)
Mathcore Long Islanders Car Bomb unleash their complex dissonance that is often compared to other bands like TDEP, Meshuggah, and Converge. Here we are at their second album w^w^^w^w (Waveform), their first album since their 2007 debut Centralia!
At that point, the band was already mixing the time changes and polyrhythms of mathcore with avant-garde beats, rhythm, and speed. For this album, clean melody adds the more dynamic aspect. w^w^^w^w adds a whole different contrast to their mathcore game, between peaceful light and violent darkness. And technicality is already the band's main power for their mathematical speed.
"The Sentinel" shows the drumming action pummeling over complex riffing and bass strokes. Notably, "Auto-Named" is an under-minute grindcore track, with so many notes in that short amount of time, something no other rock band has dared to go. The articular "Finish It" showcases drastic fury alongside a couple comedic sounds of "WOO!!!" The chorus of "Lower the Blade" is where, while keeping the chaotic noise, the cleanliness of vocal melodies and guitar chords rises. Still it won't work for anyone who's not up for going that far into brutality.
"Garrucha" sounds so easy in the even-time patterns, yet emphasized by the grinding machinery of the percussion, crushing riffs that are already crushing. Joe Duplantier of Gojira guest-appears in "Third Revelation", and not only does he provide killer growls but also the forceful impact of drum machinery that sometimes gets slower. There are also some recursive patterns towards the end of..."Recursive Patterns"! Next up, "Spirit of Poison" also briefly used clean vocals without reducing the usual monstrosity.
"Magic Bullet" has something rare, a real acoustic section that would have a different vibe if heard out of context. Yet it opens a deeper rift to descend into the lower caverns of brutal mathcore. You might expect regular mathcore in "Crud", but in the second half of that track, it goes far beyond as odd time changes and divisions decimate all boundaries. "This Will Do The Job" shows what an amazing job the band can do at making odd tight rhythms listenable. The album ends with the occasionally clean "The Seconds" to relieve you from the album's chaotic nature.
Don't listen to any music major bragging about how a different genre that's nowhere near as heavy and brutal as this album is "super-complex". If you want complex rhythms worth repeating and blasting polyrhythms, get this album that would very well blast those d****y majors' faces off!
Favorites: "The Sentinel", "Garrucha", "Third Revelation", "Magic Bullet", "Crud", "This Will Do The Job"