Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Sybreed - God Is an Automaton (2012) Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Sybreed - God Is an Automaton (2012)

Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / November 16, 2024 / 0

In 2013, one year after this release came out, Sybreed vocalist Benjamin Nominet call it quits before they were supposed to tour with Soilwork. The band had to cancel the tour, and instead of trying to find a new vocalist, they gave up and disbanded. An unfortunate end to this leading band of industrial/cyber metal...

Sybreed was formed in 2003 in Switzerland, a country in Europe surrounded by other countries like Germany, France, and Italy, and sharing the same languages as those countries. This band blends industrial metal with elements of other styles including the groove metal of Devildriver, the djent of Meshuggah, and even a dash of black metal. Their 4th album God is an Automaton is one last trip through this experimental cyber dimension.

Drum roll please, literally, for "Posthuman Manifesto", with a slow buildup into a great riff groove. It is then twisted into the usual blend of drums, synths, and clean/unclean vocals. There's also a clean bridge to get you geared up for the clean final chorus. And if that first song doesn't refresh you enough, "No Wisdom Brings Solace" certainly will, starting with the usual groove-ish industrial metal. Electronics and distorted cleans soar through the verses. Any open-minded listener can appreciate this bridge between industrial and groove. The album starts really hitting highlight status in "The Line of Least Resistance". Holy f***, this cyber metal sound is just too good not to listen! "Red Nova Ignition" has more of that groove-ish industrial metal and the additional of electronics and singing. The riffs, blasts, and time signature changes rule in that one!

The well-composed title track includes colorful soloing. Guitar solos were rare for the band up to that point. The intro and the midsection of "Hightech Versus Lowlife" sound so brutal as part of the cyber/industrial metal greatness. "Downfall Inc." does not have the variation I expect from this band. It's quite a drop in quality compared to the previous track, and the weakest one they've ever done. Disposing of some of that weakness is the catchy mainstream-ish "Challenger", which is heavier while throwing in some keyboards, a balance mastered in Antares. Nominet's vocals sound the best here, with somber cleans going well with his raging growls. So unique!

"A Radiant Daybreak" starts with sludge-ish groove in the riffing and blazing drumming. The mix of heavy riffing and clean singing really adds to the originality. "Into the Blackest Light" is another heavy banger going f***ing hard especially in the midsection breakdown. The 10-minute finale "Destruction and Bliss" is the best track here. It starts djenty as heavy rhythms fill the atmosphere. The best part is the kick-A solo by Travis Montgomery of Threat Signal. The perfect farewell from Sybreed!

One other minor issue to note for this album is the lack of audible bass. Brushing that aside, this revolutionary band made their last attack. They've recently returned with a Slave Design remaster and a new track, but if they can make more than just that, and return to performing live, that's what the cyber metal realm really needs.....

Favorites: "The Line of Least Resistance", "Red Nova Ignition", "Hightech Versus Lowlife", "Challenger", "Into the Blackest Light", "Destruction and Bliss"

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