Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Rorschach - Protestant (1993) Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Rorschach - Protestant (1993)

Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 12, 2022 / 0

The original 90s creators of the metalcore universe returned for one last album. Album #2 Protestant is a kick-A masterpiece that would make weeks-long welcomed visits in the playlists of metalcore fans wanting to hear an early mix of the genre with many others!

While the sound is mainly early metallic hardcore, you can hear small bits of punky thrash, deathgrind, and black-doom added to this bad-a** mix. With these influences, there's more riff variation than their violent metalcore-establishing debut Remain Sedate. For Protestant, they expanded on their early Voivod-like punk-thrash riffing into more creative variety. The Slayer-like dissonance is spiced up with tempo changes for progressive chaos. Breakdowns appear sparsely without any cliche over-usage.

"Mandible" already opens the album with abrasive guitar that might make you think of the industrial metal wave that was also shaping up at that time. However, the band is still in the metalcore zone with hysterical shrieks to accompany the abstract madness that gets more melodic midway through. "In Ruins" brings back the powerful anger of their debut. "Traditional" takes on the hardcore thrash that sounds like Voivod's first two albums in interesting dissonance, often twisting into violent bashing. Things get weirder in "Drawn & Quartered" when the Slayer-ish thrash chaos ends up reaching a technical style before becoming a doomy elegy.

"Shanks" has dissonant aggressive chaos taking a turn into the doomy stomping of Confessor. More of the atmospheric music can be heard in "Recurring Nightmare #105". That song and "Blinders" have probably the best early metalcore breakdowns. "Hemlock" again follows the early-Voivod formula of wild riffing and Hellbound atmosphere.

More of the band's earlier raw disjointed madness appears in "Raw Nerve". The nearly 5-minute "Skin Culture" is the band's longest song, and it continues the band's rhythm evolution with a doomy vibe before a sudden twist into faster dissonance. "Cut the Wheel" mixes these elements similarly, but this time having grindcore levels of speed and riffing. Triggering dissonant atmosphere in the best light is "Ornaments", the most atmospheric swansong to end their short career.

All in all, Protestant is an a**-kicker with top-notch music, anger, and atmosphere, going out in history as an absolute early metalcore classic. Highly recommended for fans of metalcore, or simply metal or hardcore, and any mix of those two genres that has ever existed!

Favorites: "Traditional", "Drawn & Quartered", "Recurring Nightmare #105", "Blinders", "Skin Culture", "Ornaments"

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