Cause I got nothin...
Track list:
1. Glossolalia- "Chains": Raw Atmospheric Black Metal from The United States. Off the compilation Gold In The Throat(2010)
2. StarGazer- "Pale Brethren": Technical Progressive Death Metal from Australia. Off the LP The Scream That Tore The Sky(2005)
3. Male Misandria- "Somni Specus": Blackened Grindcore from Italy. Off the LP E.DIN(2011)
4. In Disgust- "Industrial Ghetto": Powerviolence from The United States. Off the compilation San Jose Oldies, Vol. 1(2009)
5. Iconoclast Contra- "Wolf Sect: Profane": Black/Death/Powerviolence from The United States. Off the LP Combat is the Voice of the Heathen(2011)
6. Disembodied- "Bloodshed Rain": Metalcore from The United States. Off the EP If God Only Knew The Rest Were Dead(2003)
7. Wylve- "Vestiges": Raw Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Wylve(2012)
8. Deadstare- "Fetch the Baltak": Powerviolence from Austrailia. Off the compilation Discography(2001)
9. Pek- "Funeral Orations For The Detoriated Corpse Of A Mental Deficient God": Black/Death from Belgium. Off the LP Preaching Evil(2008)
10. Cultes Des Ghoules- "The Covenant and the Sacrifice": Raw Black Metal from Poland. Off the LP Haxan(2008)
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Pseudogod- Deathwomb Catechesis(2012)
Pseudogod- Deathwomb Catechesis
While the bands previous material hinted towards a very Teitanblood-like direction for Pseudogod, Deathwomb Catechesis bucks the trend so to speak. Sure, Teitanblood and Bestial Black Metal acts like Blasphemy and Conqueror remain strong influences in Pseudogod's war machine, but it's impossible to not hear the blistering, sub-human percussive assault Angelcorpse or the slithering, twisted guitar work of Morbid Angel all over this release. This strong Morbid/Angel/corpse vibe threw me off at first to be truthful, and was not entirely what I expected. I figured Deathwomb Catechesis would be the next Seven Chalices; twisted, discordant, inhumanly chaotic if not always tight and uniform. What we got instead was a well controlled, tight, fast genocide machine, spewing lots of black smoke but moving with an easy purpose across the torched landscape. Which at first felt largely unsatisfying, since desired revolution ended up being replaced with regression and a stale air of "been there, heard this."
But Deathwomb Catechesis is the kind of album that can beat down even the thickest of inner walls and reach the gooey, Metal loving insides of any increasingly cynical fan. It's... just got riffs. Lots of them, and most of them are fucking intense. "Malignant Spears" rips off a half dozen blistering Trey Azagthoth-style riffs in mere minutes, only slowing down slightly to bang heads and break spines before the unholy storm of guitar madness breaches again into the mortal world, swirling with souls. "Azazel" offers some slight variation in the form of some demented choral vocal arrangements, but it still feels like a long lost Order From Chaos track returned to the inglorious light of the Sun: blackened, hell-bent on speed and relentless in it's hunt for the holy flesh of Angels. Deathwomb Catechesis is not the ritualistic enchantment I expected, but rather the full on invasion of Hell on Earth.
Deathwomb Catechesis is not the genre-defining masterpiece I wanted, and I admit it still bothers me: for all of its strengths, the album remains largely cut and dry, with each track providing similar charms and the inescapable sense of déjà vu which dominates it's thick atmosphere. It's hard to argue with the final product though. Deathwomb Catechesis is truly an album which fits the "poser-disposer" category... yet thankfully avoids the "idiotic, bland genre worship" category.
Rating: 8/10
Sunday, April 29, 2012
The Curse Weekly Playlist: Bestial Barrage
I was a little late on last weeks playlist, so this week I thought I would be early. I was inspired to make this playlist because of an awesomely idiotic thing that happened at The Extreme Music Forum(if you have a last.fm account, join up), in which this happened: Bestial Brostep(Dubstep). The following are the masterpieces(derp) left in the wake of this stimulating, intellectual conversation:
Broclamation - Advent of the Bass Drop
Teitanbro - Seven Drops
Bro Witchery - Upheaval of Satanic Wubs
Brosphemy - Gods of Wub
Archbro - Wub of Brolehem
Brosphemophager- Nuclear Bropire of Wubacolypse
Bestial Brolust- Drops & Wubs
Mobrosidad – Morbrosidad
Sabromator - Goatwobble Panspermia
Broherit - Dropping Down the Bass
Anal Wubsphemy - Brostial Black Metal Wubs
Conquerbro - Wub Cult Supremacy
Pseudobro- Deathwub Broechesis
1. Pseudogod- "Malignant Spears" : Bestial Black/Death from Russia. Off the LP Deathwomb Catechesis(2012)
2. Bahimiron- "The Abattior Inferno" : Raw Bestial Black Metal from The United States. Off the LP Rebels Hymns of Left Handed Terror(2011)
3. The Haunting Presence- "Obscurity Realms(Ritual of Conscious Destruction)" : Raw Bestial Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo the haunting presence(2011)
4. Blasphemophager- "Altar of Quantum Immortality" : Bestial Black Metal from Italy. Off the LP …For Chaos, Obscurity and Desolation…(2010)
5. Manticore- "Unveiling the Ascension" : Bestial Black/Death from The United States. Off the LP For Rats and Plague(2006)
6. The Beast of the Apocalypse- "I Am Not Worthy To Utter Thy Name" : Progressive Bestial Black Metal from the Netherlands. Off the LP Henosis(2011)
7. Goatpenis- "FROG-7 Missles" : Bestial Black/Death from Brazil. Off the LP Depleted Ammunition(2011)
8. Truppensturm- "NecroEucharist" : Bestial Black Metal from Germany. Off the LP Salute to the Iron Emperors(2010)
9. Anal Blasphemy- "Night of Inversion" " Raw Bestial Black Metal from Finland. Off the LP Profane Fornication Ejaculation(2010)
10. Impious Baptism- "Path of the Inverted Trinity" : Bestial Black Thrash from Australia. Off the EP Path of the Inverted Trinity(2012)
Friday, April 27, 2012
Sutekh Hexen - Larvae (2012)
Sutekh Hexen - Larvae
The first track, “Isvar Savasana,” is a track composed of poignant synths, noisy drones, and remote guitar notes in the background. The distorted vocals build up along with the guitar sounds until it all crashes into a void of black noise. This is also a proof that production helps noise artists as well: if it was shitty on this track, this would end up as a wall of ugly noise that does nothing but random clamor. Instead, you have a dynamic arena of demonic vocals, drums and riffs, walls of blissful static, and other black noise paraphernalia. This sense is what helps the record from failing into an ugly salad of random noise.
The second track, “Lead Us in Warfare,” also the shortest one, opens with a doom-like riff and noise, and then aptly changes into a martial rhythm with high distorted vocals and crushing bass. The track plods in a lugubrious pace and creates the sense of a battlefield. The combination of the vocals and bass here sounds like some broken military equipment while its surroundings are being bombarded into oblivion. The vocals fade out, and the bass lingers on some more. Felicitous primordial audio-terror.
The third and final track, “Let There Be Light,” is the zenith. Dolorous and mournful, it brings forth stark and grim walls of bleak winters. At first, the track evokes a sense of an eternal and frostbitten winter, with forlorn chants and howls, until it breaks into flaring riffs accompanied with noise that slowly include a void-like guitar riff. It clearly shows that Sutekh Hexen knows its black noise and how to aptly deal with juxtaposed black metal and noise.
Larvae is an interesting album, to say the least. It’s a meditation in chaos, with many ideas and layers, that most of them have been executed well enough. Naturally, it has some flaws: some points aren’t clear enough, other ones aren’t engaging enough, many parts with generic studio pitch corrections, not enough awe-inspiring moments, and the likes. But if you like black noise, experimentation, or just need something new in your black metal, you should most definitely give this album a shot.
Rating: 8.5/10
Undergang- Til Døden os Skiller(2012)
Undergang- Til Døden os Skiller
Til Døden os Skiller, the follow up to the incredibly brilliant Indhentet Af Døden, had it's work cut out for it. Indhentet Af Døden was basically perfect: a brilliant mix of Rottrevore's slimey, gut-chewing down tempo madness and the unhinged strangeness of Finnish masters such as Depravity and Demilich; played with incredible energy and featuring some of the best Death Metal production one could ask for. Til Døden os Skiller was fighting an uphill battle from the beginning.
And it lost.
Til Døden os Skiller just doesn't stack up to Indhentet Af Døden in, well, any real way. It's a far more subdued, straightforward effort with a somewhat slicker production that while still energetic and heavier than sin, doesn't feel like the labor of love and violence that Indhentet Af Døden did. It's always controversial to compare a bands previous work to their newest material, and often even a bit unfair. But when a band is sticking to a similar style from album to album, it's impossible to not compare a bands albums to each other. But this doesn't make Til Døden os Skiller a bad record at all: Undergang simply cannot make a bad record, as their sound is just too brutal and too massive to ever be boring. It's just disappointing to hear a band regress and become more digestible and safe.
The first thing that stands out about Til Døden os Skiller is how much more subdued the song-writing is: while much of the Rottrevore-meets-Asphyx heaviness remains in tact, songs follow much simpler paths and rarely engage in the odd, creepy sounding progressions that made Indhentet Af Døden such a powerful release. It's still insanely heavy, and at times groovy: "Ormeorgie" is a headbangers paradise, featuring a dozen skull-smashing riffs and plenty of Doom-laden goodness. The following track, "Når Børnene Dør" starts weakly with a poor sample(an issue which appears constantly on the album), but once the song gets going it's all very musty and death-laden. Til Døden os Skiller feels like a slightly faster album than Indhentet Af Døden did, with more moments of blast-beat domination, but don't expect Undergang to enter Angelcorpse territory; things stay slow and mid-paced throughout, but the diversity of tempo is always a nice thing. Vocalist David Torturdod remains consistently underwhelming though: his weak growl sounds gassed and is usually lost in the shuffle, although his higher-register vocal sounds powerful and dripping. It's a shame he doesn't use it more often.
As I said before, Undergang in their current incarnation are likely incapable of releasing anything that isn't appealing to most Death Metal fans, as there just are not a lot of primitive, Rottrevore inspired bands floating around. Til Døden os Skiller is perfectly listenable, enjoyable, and at times even a bit dynamic. But those moments of "what the fuck am I listening to?" that dominated Indhentet Af Døden , those moments when the band would break out in a Suffocation style breakdown like on "Dødshymne" or the odd, bouncy and almost happy intro of "Evigt Lidende," are just not to be found here. Undergang have taken a much more accessible, simplistic approach to songwriting on Til Døden os Skiller, and it shows in a somewhat inferior album. And album I would still recommend, but not the one I was hoping for.
Rating: 7.5/10
And it lost.
Til Døden os Skiller just doesn't stack up to Indhentet Af Døden in, well, any real way. It's a far more subdued, straightforward effort with a somewhat slicker production that while still energetic and heavier than sin, doesn't feel like the labor of love and violence that Indhentet Af Døden did. It's always controversial to compare a bands previous work to their newest material, and often even a bit unfair. But when a band is sticking to a similar style from album to album, it's impossible to not compare a bands albums to each other. But this doesn't make Til Døden os Skiller a bad record at all: Undergang simply cannot make a bad record, as their sound is just too brutal and too massive to ever be boring. It's just disappointing to hear a band regress and become more digestible and safe.
The first thing that stands out about Til Døden os Skiller is how much more subdued the song-writing is: while much of the Rottrevore-meets-Asphyx heaviness remains in tact, songs follow much simpler paths and rarely engage in the odd, creepy sounding progressions that made Indhentet Af Døden such a powerful release. It's still insanely heavy, and at times groovy: "Ormeorgie" is a headbangers paradise, featuring a dozen skull-smashing riffs and plenty of Doom-laden goodness. The following track, "Når Børnene Dør" starts weakly with a poor sample(an issue which appears constantly on the album), but once the song gets going it's all very musty and death-laden. Til Døden os Skiller feels like a slightly faster album than Indhentet Af Døden did, with more moments of blast-beat domination, but don't expect Undergang to enter Angelcorpse territory; things stay slow and mid-paced throughout, but the diversity of tempo is always a nice thing. Vocalist David Torturdod remains consistently underwhelming though: his weak growl sounds gassed and is usually lost in the shuffle, although his higher-register vocal sounds powerful and dripping. It's a shame he doesn't use it more often.
As I said before, Undergang in their current incarnation are likely incapable of releasing anything that isn't appealing to most Death Metal fans, as there just are not a lot of primitive, Rottrevore inspired bands floating around. Til Døden os Skiller is perfectly listenable, enjoyable, and at times even a bit dynamic. But those moments of "what the fuck am I listening to?" that dominated Indhentet Af Døden , those moments when the band would break out in a Suffocation style breakdown like on "Dødshymne" or the odd, bouncy and almost happy intro of "Evigt Lidende," are just not to be found here. Undergang have taken a much more accessible, simplistic approach to songwriting on Til Døden os Skiller, and it shows in a somewhat inferior album. And album I would still recommend, but not the one I was hoping for.
Rating: 7.5/10
Male Misandria- E.DIN(2011)

Italy's Male Misandria play a style of Blackened Grindcore that isn't too far from Anaal Nathrakh's noisy, screaming nightmares, with the same tortured vocals and tendency to explore the abnormal. But I can easily say I vastly prefer the more stripped down, Punk infused edge that Male Misandria bring; with influences of Powerviolence and Crust Punk, E.DIN is a focused, strange and skin-peeling Blackened Grindcore that brims with filthy anger.
I don't want to play up the Anaal Nathrakh comparison too much: there are similarities, but not overwhelmingly so: Male Misandria are more firmly rooted to the ground and wield a Punk-infused edge. It's all very fast and loud, which means everything is working as it should be. Tracks are short and noisey, yet often include sudden bits of atmospheric, grim introspection: "Homo Homini Homo" starts off with some mid-paced, frost bitten guitar work that screams Emperor, complete with a smattering of operatic vocals, before mutating into a static drenched, dripping syringe of blasting Grindcore/Powerviolence that enters the blood-stream like burning fire. "Somni Spectus" features one of the sexiest, filthiest riffs on the album, the opening roar of the guitars complimented with excellent use of samples to create a sickening, blackened atmosphere without ever losing it's aggressive, crusty edge. E.DIN also features some rather odd song titles, including such classics as "I'm So Cook" and "Vomitsoapbubbles..." Male Misandria are clearly not all that interested in sticking too closely to genre conventions, which in many ways is a strength all it's own.
E.DIN may be an acquired taste for many no matter what: vocalist S.P. has a voice which will grate on your average Metal fan, while the bands blackened, space-y aspects will likely turn off the Punk kids from getting all the way behind the bands sledge-hammer moments. And in general, E.DIN is the kind of spastic, genre-bending strangeness that purists in general just despise. But then again, who cares what purists think. E.DIN is as rock solid, brutal and manic as one could ask from a whacked out Italian Black-Grind band.
Rating: 8/10
I don't want to play up the Anaal Nathrakh comparison too much: there are similarities, but not overwhelmingly so: Male Misandria are more firmly rooted to the ground and wield a Punk-infused edge. It's all very fast and loud, which means everything is working as it should be. Tracks are short and noisey, yet often include sudden bits of atmospheric, grim introspection: "Homo Homini Homo" starts off with some mid-paced, frost bitten guitar work that screams Emperor, complete with a smattering of operatic vocals, before mutating into a static drenched, dripping syringe of blasting Grindcore/Powerviolence that enters the blood-stream like burning fire. "Somni Spectus" features one of the sexiest, filthiest riffs on the album, the opening roar of the guitars complimented with excellent use of samples to create a sickening, blackened atmosphere without ever losing it's aggressive, crusty edge. E.DIN also features some rather odd song titles, including such classics as "I'm So Cook" and "Vomitsoapbubbles..." Male Misandria are clearly not all that interested in sticking too closely to genre conventions, which in many ways is a strength all it's own.
E.DIN may be an acquired taste for many no matter what: vocalist S.P. has a voice which will grate on your average Metal fan, while the bands blackened, space-y aspects will likely turn off the Punk kids from getting all the way behind the bands sledge-hammer moments. And in general, E.DIN is the kind of spastic, genre-bending strangeness that purists in general just despise. But then again, who cares what purists think. E.DIN is as rock solid, brutal and manic as one could ask from a whacked out Italian Black-Grind band.
Rating: 8/10
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
The Curse Weekly Playlist: Old School Death Metal Revival That Doesn't Suck
Based on some of the review scores here, one would think I despise Old School Death Metal. Thing is, I don't: I just dislike more than half of it. I've said so before, but it bares mentioning again: as far as I am concerned, Death Metal didn't exist until New York and Finland started making it in the early 90's. The early Floridian and Swedish scenes, the birth places of Death Metal, will always be... well, shit. At least for me: bands like Master, Entombed, Obituary, Dismember hold absolutely no appeal for me in even the slightest. Truth is, I can't even sit through a song without getting bored to tears and throwing on Onward to Golgotha.
But this doesn't mean I hate Old School Death Metal, or it's recent revival. For every shitty SwedDeath worship band, there is usually one band doing something awesome. In honor of these bands, my weekly playlist will consist of Old School Death Metal Revival bands that do not actually suck. Learn to respect, Miasmal's of the world:
Track List:
1. Innumerable Forms- "Contaminated" : Death Metal from The United States. Off the demo Dark Worship(2010). Similar Artists: Incantation, Morpheus Descends, Killing Addiction
2. Adversarial- "Thralls" : Black/Death Metal from Canada. Off the LP All Idols Fall Before the Hammer(2010). Similar Artists: Angelcorpse, Blasphemy, Incantation
3. Desecresy- "Path of the Descendent" : Death/Doom from Finland. Off the LP Arches of Entropy(2010). Similar Artists: Rippikolu, Slughathor, Krypts
4. Execration- "Soul Maggot" : Death Metal from Norway. Off the LP Odes of the Occult(2011). Similar Artists: Immolation, Bolt Thrower, Asphyx
5. Vahrzaw- "Revelations" : Black/Death from Australia. Off the LP Defiant(2009). Similar Artists: Immolation, Incantation, Angelcorpse
6. Spearhead- "Herald the Lightning" : Black/Death from England. Off the LP Theomachina(2011). Similar Artists: Angelcorpse, Morbid Angel, Order From Chaos
7. Morbid Flesh- "Reborn in Death" : Death Metal from Spain. Off the LP Reborn in Death(2011). Similar Artists: Autopsy, Grave, Death(early)
8. Putrevore- "The Skies Vomit Sulfur" : Primitive Death Metal from Spain. Off the LP Morphed From Deadbreath(2008). Similar Artists: Rottrevore, Morpheus Descends, Infester
9. Nerlich- "Entity of Sickness" : Old School Technical Death Metal from Finland. Off the LP Defabricated Process(2007). Similar Artists: Martyr, Oppressor, Suffocation
10. Dead Congregation- "Teeth Into Red" : Death Metal from Greece. Off the LP Grave of the Archangels(2009). Similar Artists: Incantation, Immolation, Deathspell Omega
But this doesn't mean I hate Old School Death Metal, or it's recent revival. For every shitty SwedDeath worship band, there is usually one band doing something awesome. In honor of these bands, my weekly playlist will consist of Old School Death Metal Revival bands that do not actually suck. Learn to respect, Miasmal's of the world:
Track List:
1. Innumerable Forms- "Contaminated" : Death Metal from The United States. Off the demo Dark Worship(2010). Similar Artists: Incantation, Morpheus Descends, Killing Addiction
2. Adversarial- "Thralls" : Black/Death Metal from Canada. Off the LP All Idols Fall Before the Hammer(2010). Similar Artists: Angelcorpse, Blasphemy, Incantation
3. Desecresy- "Path of the Descendent" : Death/Doom from Finland. Off the LP Arches of Entropy(2010). Similar Artists: Rippikolu, Slughathor, Krypts
4. Execration- "Soul Maggot" : Death Metal from Norway. Off the LP Odes of the Occult(2011). Similar Artists: Immolation, Bolt Thrower, Asphyx
5. Vahrzaw- "Revelations" : Black/Death from Australia. Off the LP Defiant(2009). Similar Artists: Immolation, Incantation, Angelcorpse
6. Spearhead- "Herald the Lightning" : Black/Death from England. Off the LP Theomachina(2011). Similar Artists: Angelcorpse, Morbid Angel, Order From Chaos
7. Morbid Flesh- "Reborn in Death" : Death Metal from Spain. Off the LP Reborn in Death(2011). Similar Artists: Autopsy, Grave, Death(early)
8. Putrevore- "The Skies Vomit Sulfur" : Primitive Death Metal from Spain. Off the LP Morphed From Deadbreath(2008). Similar Artists: Rottrevore, Morpheus Descends, Infester
9. Nerlich- "Entity of Sickness" : Old School Technical Death Metal from Finland. Off the LP Defabricated Process(2007). Similar Artists: Martyr, Oppressor, Suffocation
10. Dead Congregation- "Teeth Into Red" : Death Metal from Greece. Off the LP Grave of the Archangels(2009). Similar Artists: Incantation, Immolation, Deathspell Omega
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Acephalix- Deathless Master(2012)
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Acephalix- Deathless Master |
Yeah, you can all see where this is going.
Deathless Master certainly delivers on all fronts, at least for those seeking only the most worship-y Entombed and Grave worship. Nothing is out of place, nothing is new or challenging and nothing will ever make you question Acephalix's loyalty to Sunlight Studios guitar sounds or true old-school credibility. Deathless Master has a singular purpose, and commits to it with plenty of verve and vigor. Everything is genre appropriate, from the album cover, song titles and lyrics to the song-writing, which effectively captures the essence of the heavily melodic, simplistic and musty Swedish Death Metal sound to total carbon-copy perfection. Acephalix perform each track masterfully, at the very least never sounding sloppy or overwhelmed, while vocalist Dan(that's it) is a capable growler in his own right, providing a solid low grunt which predictably accompanies each economical, effortless track. Truly, Deathless Master is a machine with plenty of hellish fuel to power it's journey into the crypts.
And FUCK is it boring.
And album like Deathless Master has becoming increasingly common in Death Metal: all soulless style, no substance. Acephalix steal their riffs from Left Hand Path with mechanical precision, and play them with a kind of blandness that can make one slip into a deep sleep at a moments notice. Fearfully constructed to appeal to the masses, Deathless Master is the kind of highly accessible dribble hidden under a reverb drenched production that is over-running Death Metal as we speak. There are quite literally only two moments, not songs but moments, where Deathless Master ever carries any weight or intensity: the opening riffs of "... On Wings" and "The Hunger" bring much needed evil to an album which for the most part is merely highly digestible junk food.
On it's surface, there is nothing inherently wrong with the concept of an accessible, for lack of a better phrase, "Pop" Death Metal album. And the Swedish Death Metal sound has always been the most accessible Death Metal sound, so there really should be no surprise that Deathless Master is a largely easy listen. It all comes down to personal taste really, and for this particular listener, Deathless Master is little more than lifeless static in a sea of soulless static peddlers; a piece of worship with no real faith backing it, other than faith in it's own popularity. Deathless Master was always going to be a success by virtue of what it is, regardless of the quality: it's Death Metal on Easy Mode.
Deathless Master is just one more example of a Death Metal scene which has become increasingly toxic to things like creativity and originality. Calls of "it wasn't broken, why fix it?" and "this is REAL Death Metal" fill the air, and power an album like Deathless Master to new heights, sure to be highly featured on many year end lists as one of the best albums of 2012: genetically engineered for hype and mass appeal. Which again, is not really a bad thing... unless it begins to overwhelm a genre's artistic credibility. With Death Metal becoming so hostile to artists who endeavor to be original and put serious work into their song-craft, an album like Deathless Master could very well be a death knell for the genre itself; one that is becoming increasingly self-contained and regressive.
Which puts pretty massive weight behind an album as slight and generally forgettable as Deathless Master doesn't it?
Rating: 3/10
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Receptionist - This is Everything(2012)
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Receptionist- This is Everything |
I was more than curious to see this shambling creature of the past come my way, considering they sound that Receptionist play is largely dead. Metalcore - real Metalcore - lived a short, brutal life through the 90's, when Metallic Hardcore got even more pissed off(if that is even possible): the demented ramblings of Converge, Rorschach, Starkweather, Botch and Deadguy led a small, brutal underground revolution in two separate scenes which had not always played nice with each other. But then came the new millennium, and with it a new genre of music which adopted the Metalcore name. These new bands sounded nothing like their 90's predecessors, owing far more to Gothenburg Death Metal and Groove Metal than anything even remotely Hardcore Punk. But the damage was done: these new generations of bands made Metalcore a toxic genre, and so bastardized the very concept of Metalcore that history was literally re-written to exclude the classic 90's bands from the genre they created(with such idiotic genre's as "Chaotic Hardcore"). Couple this with the fact that only a handful of the 90's bands remain, and Metalcore as it was intended has largely been lost to history.
Clearly, Receptionist are pretty pissed off about this, and they let their dissatisfaction with it be known on This is Everything. For some younger fans, particularly those who enjoy modern "Metalcore," Receptionist's sonic blitzkriegs might sound wholly unique, even revolutionary. And at one point they were... when Rorschach and Botch came up with them over a decade ago. Not that this is an issue: This is Everything might not be anything new, but with how rare it is to hear 90's Metalcore played with this kind of vigor and aggression in the modern scene, This is Everything feels massively powerful. Receptionist masterfully mix the unhinged intensity of Deadguy with the technical breakdowns of Botch and the long, atmospheric riffing style of Starkweather into a grab bag of all the best that classic Metalcore has to offer, amping up the emotion and rage with an unrelenting sense of impending misfortune and a hint of suffering. Metalcore was always meant to be an emotional, full body experience, and Receptionist seem to have a strong understanding of this concept: "Flying Dutchman" starts out by kicking in your teeth with a fast, semi-technical foot to your grill ; like a kick to the face, it's over quickly and it hurts, but the song quickly enters into a reflective, atmospheric composition, complete with an unholy choir chanting with the distorted tides of crushing riffs. The final track, "Ménière" begins slow, a single guitar signaling the coming storm. The track slowly builds, adding layers of tension and dread, but it never quite explodes into chaotic domination: instead, it's a somber sojourn, leading to that most inevitable of ends...
If This is Everything is causing me to wax poetic, I must apologize. I just can't help it: this is a sound, a style, an idea that has unfairly been lost to an entire generation, all because of some stupid fucking genre classification. It makes This is Everything feel more important than it really is: it's a fairly standard amalgamation of the various sounds from 90's Metalcore. This is Everything is not overflowing with new or fresh ideas or revolutionary concepts. And yet This is Everything feels fresh and masterful, largely because this style of Metalcore has become the pink diamond of Extreme Music: rare and a pain in the ass to find. This Olso based two-piece have brought to a new generation a sound and a musical ideology which has long sense diminished into almost nothing... and for that alone, This is Everything is a masterstroke.
Rating: 9/10
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
The Curse Weekly Playlist: Raw
I have been listening to nothing but raw, shitty sounding Black Metal for weeks. So this weekly playlist has been skewed to that... nothing but raw, shitty sounding Black Metal.
Raw as Fuck
Track List:
1. Odz Manouk- "The Indisiplinarian" : Raw Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Odz Manouk
2. Tukaaria- "Prehistoric Silence" : Raw Black Metal from The United States. Off the LP Raw to the Rapine
3. Botanist- "Megaskempasma" : Raw Avant-Garde Black Metal. Off the LP I: The Suicide Tree/II: A Rose From the Dead
4. Ill Omen- "Sins of the Flesh" : Raw Black/Death from Australia. Off the LP Divinity Through Un-Creation
5. Jute Gyte- "The Light That Hangs Above the Fields" : Raw Progressive Black Metal. Off the LP Verstiegenheit
6. Cornigr- "Death Trimorph" : Raw Black Metal from Finland. Off the LP Relics of Inner War
7. Venereverent- "Obsecration Teaghlach" : Raw Progressive Black Metal from The United States. Off the LP Evermore and Evermore
8. Xothist- "V" : Raw Atmospheric Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Xothist.
9. Ordo Obsidium- "Into the Gates of Madness" : Raw Black/Doom from The United States. Off the LP Orbus Tertius
10. Shaidar Logoth- "Mashiara Shai'tan" : Raw Atmospheric Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Chapter I: The Peddler
Raw as Fuck
Track List:
1. Odz Manouk- "The Indisiplinarian" : Raw Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Odz Manouk
2. Tukaaria- "Prehistoric Silence" : Raw Black Metal from The United States. Off the LP Raw to the Rapine
3. Botanist- "Megaskempasma" : Raw Avant-Garde Black Metal. Off the LP I: The Suicide Tree/II: A Rose From the Dead
4. Ill Omen- "Sins of the Flesh" : Raw Black/Death from Australia. Off the LP Divinity Through Un-Creation
5. Jute Gyte- "The Light That Hangs Above the Fields" : Raw Progressive Black Metal. Off the LP Verstiegenheit
6. Cornigr- "Death Trimorph" : Raw Black Metal from Finland. Off the LP Relics of Inner War
7. Venereverent- "Obsecration Teaghlach" : Raw Progressive Black Metal from The United States. Off the LP Evermore and Evermore
8. Xothist- "V" : Raw Atmospheric Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Xothist.
9. Ordo Obsidium- "Into the Gates of Madness" : Raw Black/Doom from The United States. Off the LP Orbus Tertius
10. Shaidar Logoth- "Mashiara Shai'tan" : Raw Atmospheric Black Metal from The United States. Off the demo Chapter I: The Peddler
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