Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services (2025)
If you've read Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Diper Overlode, you would know that (SPOILER ALERT) a heavy metal band named Metallichihuahua started out popular in the 90s before splitting up, and then reunited 25 years later for a special surprise show. In the timeline that we're in, Deadguy had a similar history at around the same time. They formed in 1994 in New Jersey and released several EPs and an album. Their noise-fueled metallic hardcore sound was praised by many fans and would then spawn a different genre, mathcore. However, their time was short-lived, disbanding in 1997. Members of that band and Rorschach would form another short-lived band, Kiss It Goodbye.
In 2021, an authorized documentary of the band was released, titled Deadguy: Killing Music. They were then invited to reform and perform a special show at Underground Arts, a day after the documentary was released. And then more live shows occured, all the way up to 2023. Finally, a couple years after that, their first album in 30 years has arrived! Near-Death Travel Services picks up where Fixation on a Co-Worker with its killer heavy songs that show the band still standing in the present as much as in the past.
Right when opener "Kill Fee" blasts off, you know the band is back to make some f***ing noise. It's an explosion of metal/mathcore fury and rage to give their fans a lot of joy. "Barn Burner" continues that fire. "New Best Friend" is another single that can provide you a what to expect in the album. "Cheap Trick" is another intense blast from the past.
Then comes another standout, "The Forever People". Anyone who thought it would be a My Dying Bride cover has been proven wrong. If it was though, that would've been the most direct connection between that band and metalcore/mathcore since that fiddling riff in Converge's "Conduit" similar to that in "Vast Choirs". Next, "War With Strangers" has a slower pace that then speeds up in the usual riffing/shouting fury. That reminds me, vocalist Tim Singer still has his p*ssed vocal rage after all those years away from the band, and he's around my dad's age (his early 50s). You can hear more of all that in "Knife Sharpener".
"The Alarmist" keeps up the chaos to bring us joy. "The Long Search for Perfect Timing" is aptly titled, ending the earlier fans' 30-year search for the perfect song to surpass the debut. I'm also guessing the band was listening to 7 Angels 7 Plagues in the first few years of inactivity. "All Stick & No Carrot" packs some punches with the usual Deadguy energy. The members work together in great synergy. "Wax Princess" wraps it all up, having some more of the similar aspects to 7 Angels 7 Plagues.
Not often does a 30-year comeback turn out so well, but Deadguy is far from dead, and their new album Near-Death Travel Services proves it. They might just start a new path, and chances are, we won't have to wait until 2055 for their 3rd album. This is the chaos we need, to make up for the actual chaos in this world!
Favorites: "Kill Fee", "Cheap Trick", "The Forever People", "War With Strangers", "The Long Search for Perfect Timing", "All Stick & No Carrot"