Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Earth Crisis - Firestorm (1993)
Another addition to my "most essential metalcore albums from the 90s" is the 1993 EP from Earth Crisis, Firestorm! This war cry of an EP was a twist in underground hardcore. This band, along with Vision of Disorder and Snapcase, would metallize hardcore away from the outdated Youth Crew scene. Firestorm would build the metal bridge into a new 90s wave of hardcore/post-hardcore, updated into a different genre, metalcore!
Firestorm has the kind of objective Earth Crisis have in much of their material; sending a message via music. The EP unleashes underground anger, and they don't do it without reason. They rage out on different topics that have tainted the world, all while remaining rock-stars (or metalcore stars).
Karl Buechner indirectly screams out that kind of message in the popular title track, "A chemically tainted welfare generation, absolute complete moral degeneration". The track is indexed together with "Forged in the Flames", an incredible anthem for The Revolution. "Unseen Holocaust" has a catatonic breakdown, but the rest of the song drives on through the sonic assault of Karl's vocals as he addresses indigenous people and their risk of genocide and relocation. "Eden's Demise" tries to teach us that veganism might be the way to save the environment. Is that Straight Edge or what!?
In the end, Earth Crisis is never a band to sell out to expand their audience. Firestorm pleases the fanbase they have and would expand with pure simple 90s metallic hardcore. The band would later experiment with other different territories in music, but no 90s metal/hardcore discovery journey would be complete without Earth Crisis, and this 15-minute EP is their very definition. Firestorm is a brave essential release that can be used as a less deadly but equally good-feeling alternate to weapons!
Favorites: "Firestorm", "Forged in the Flames"