Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Make Them Suffer - Make Them Suffer (2024) Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Make Them Suffer - Make Them Suffer (2024)

Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / November 14, 2024 / 0

When Make Them Suffer started releasing some new singles with their new keyboardist/co-lead vocalist Alex Reade, replacing Booka Nile who left due to abuse allegations, they were some of the best, most kick-A singles I've ever heard from this band's new era. Even my brother likes a couple of those singles. They really made me look forward to their self-titled album, and it has all the greatness I hoped for!

Formed in 2008 in Perth, Australia, Make Them Suffer has had such a powerful evolution that has never worn down. Beginning with pre-Lorna Shore epic deathcore in their glorious debut Neverbloom, they've gotten less deathly and more melodic over the years. With their brand-new self-titled album, their successful journey continues.

The intro "The Warning" has climatic choral vocals leading into industrial synths. Then it blasts into the grinding guitar grooves of "Weaponized". The chorus is where you first get to the beautiful cleans of Alex Reade, greatly balanced with the unclean growls of Sean Harmanis. The sky is the limit, and they made it higher with a lot to expect in this album. "Oscillator" is another kick-A track worth headbanging to. This and "Doomswitch" really make my day, the latter being a f***ing masterpiece of a banger!

As with some of the other tracks here, "Mana God" has Harmanis growling the song title as early as the intro. The modern downtuned metalcore is displayed in reckless abandon, with not many clean melodic moments in this track. The growling power of Harmanis is backed up by some additional screams from Reade. The pause on the usual structure helps cut down on the repetition and makes you remember how enjoyable this album is. "Epitaph" kicks things up h*lla hard. Reade has more of the divine spotlight in "No Hard Feelings". The heaviness is toned down slightly for some lovely melody, while staying fast and killer. Harmanis continues his harsh screams while also offering some gruff singing behind Reade. They both might make the best metal vocal duo of the year alongside Linkin Park's Mike Shinoda and Emily Armstrong!

Then Reade is out and Harmanis is in all the way in "Venusian Blues". His clean singing doesn't catch my attention as much as Reade does, but he easily show his different techniques in more ways than vocalists in other bands. The technical instrumentation will make sure you don't stop listening. "Ghost of Me" is a well-done standout single with amazing lyrics! Sean's incredible vocals help maintain the band's bad-a** single streak. We have more of the band's signature in heaviness in "Tether". Finally, "Small Town Syndrome" ends the album with the best the band has to offer. Not just from the two vocalists, but also the impressive instrumentalists that help run the machine.

Make Them Suffer are at the top of their game once again, helped out by Alex Reade, who has never given up after her previous band Drown This City fell apart. This album is the most incredible one by Make Them Suffer since Neverbloom, and even the mundane verse-chorus structure has some variation. They're back and stronger than ever!

Favorites: "Weaponized", "Doomswitch", "Mana God", "No Hard Feelings", "Ghost of Me", "Small Town Syndrome"

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