Showing posts with label *Beecher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label *Beecher. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Beecher - 2003 Breaking The Fourth Wall (Re-issue)


Band : Beecher
Album : Breaking The Fourth Wall (Re-issue)
Release Year : 2003
Genre : Hardcore | Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
1. Arrows Flies
2. Burning Surfaces
3. Dead for Weeks
4. Floating Point
5. Let Them Drown
6. Mercury Switch
7. Red Diesel
8. The Only One I Know
09. Cabin Boy Jumped Ship
10. An Important Letter
11. Ladder Theory
12. Crack Friend
13. Let Them Drown (Live)
14. An Important Letter (Live)
15. Arrow Flies (Live)
16. Red Diesel (Live)
17. Dead For Weeks (Lard Lubber Edit)

It's not often you find a non-prog act using guitar and bass synthesizers. But then again, it's not often you hear a band like Beecher. Originally released in 2003, Breaking The Fourth Wall is being reissued by Earache in an attempt to garner a wider and more deserving fanbase for a U.K. band with nimble fingers an impeccable ear for songwriting.

Wow, this is a lot different than I remembered. I originally heard this back when it came out, and remembered it sounding like a Cult of Luna/Isis thing. I'm not sure it's possible I could've been any more wrong. They're one of the many bands to embrace the production of Kurt Ballou (Converge, Old Man Gloom, American Nightmare), and if that doesn't tell you a little bit about their sound, I'll do the courtesy of mapping it out. Ranging anywhere from chaotic/metallic hardcore, to prog/jazz, to swelling ambience, Beecher have concentrated their collective efforts into creating something that can honestly be referred to as unique. Usually sticking to a typical screeching and spastic yell, there's melodic and sincere singing of all sorts throughout Breaking The Fourth Wall. While it's sort of poppier and almost...emo, I can assure you, it's not the same obnoxious vocals you're used to from the plethora of MTV2 acts that have penetrated our radios. It's more along the lines of Cave In. Although the general feel of the release is probably that of Converge mixed with Refused, there's elements of so many styles, whether it's noisy and wandering, or the straightforward riffing that brings The Hope Conspiracy to mind. Their ability to go from peaceful to livid is so pronounced on songs like "The Only One I Know", going from a subdued melodic passage with delay to direct and dirty sounding hardcore, flawlessly and without hesitation. One interesting tidbit is that DJ Speedranch (Best known for his work with James Plotkin and Dave Witte in Phantomsmasher and his work with Venetian Snares) also apparently does vocals on a few of the tracks, which almost certainly contributes to the band's experimentation into noise and electronics on "Floating Point". Later, "Red Diesel" bursts into an intense flurry of dissonance that rivals the talents of Watchmaker and goes off to riffing over noise and samples before making the return to the original sound. The solemn and almost spiritual starting piece of "Ladder Theory" is one of the more beautiful compositions on the album before erupting into another one of Beecher's thunderous rampages.

I'm so glad Earache reissued this, as otherwise I probably would've never have gotten around to hearing this again. Given how much I'm enjoying this, that'd be a certain tragedy. I'm just kicking myself for not catching on sooner. Recommended to anyone who finds themselves excited over the manic technicality of Converge, the honest approach of Planes Mistaken For Stars, or the DIY style of bands on Level Plane. Breaking The Fourth Wall is as clever as it is catchy, and as talented as it is well-written. I'm telling you, go out and grab this, unless you absolutely can't stand clean singing or hate technical/mathy metalcore/hardcore/whatever you want to call it. One of the brighter releases in a while, Beecher show more promise and potential in their first full-length than most bands do in their entire lifetime. -Drew Ailes






Sunday, September 18, 2011

Beecher - 2005 This Elegy, His Autopsy


Band : Beecher
Album : This Elegy, His Autopsy
Release Year : 2005
Genre : Hardcore | Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
1. It's Good Weather for Black Leather
2. Function ! Function !
3. The Womanizer and the Alcoholic
4. Knight the Arsonist
5. Not Guilty
6. And on the Day He Became a Human Plumb Line
7. Psycho Galvanic Skin Response
8. Man the Traps
9. Brown Eyes (No Name)
10. The Biting Cold
11. I Won't Miss, or Be Missed
12. Happiness
13. Reach Up to the Gods

It still seems an odd choice that it was Earache Records, famous for its elitist death/black/grind metal roster, which signed Beecher. Granted, this is the same label that picked up Dillinger Escape Plan when they needed it, but a hardcore/math/noise band like Beecher? Still, neither band nor label will be complaining considering what a masterpiece this album is.

Manchester's home grown Beecher have been building a reputation for themselves for quite sometime, helped by tracks like "Dead for Weeks", but on their first album, they never really escaped the sometimes brilliant hardcore/noise sound Converge have been perfecting and defining for years. This time however, all has changed.

"This Elegy, His Autopsy" is a stunning work of not just the sound that made them initially, but an eclectic mix of everything that makes metal music so good. Brilliant energetic opener "Its good weather for Black Leather" and single "Function! Function!" are great examples of what they can already do, but even better, suggesting why it was a good idea for these to be the opening songs of the album. Because the rest of the album is a descent through the dark and varied sounds heavy metal can offer. "Not Guilty" is the first example, being a sludgy track which falls into a lo-fi sound on its way, most reckoned to Old Man Gloom's sound. However on first listen it will sound like a trick, as the next track "And on the day that he became a human plumb-line" can be recognised as something an emo-punk band would create, and is the lightest moment of the album, with its mainly instrumental likeable guitar sounds and light production.

This yet another welcomed variation to keep the listener on their toes however, as it leads into thrash/grind metal track "Psycho Galvanic Skin Response", a track which will blast you through a brick wall due to its sheer velocity. And this album will keep surprising you like that. In an awe-inspiring, energetic way, this album successfully notes all of metal's sub genres; Thrash, Death, Black, Grind, Math, Sludge and even Stoner on the drug addled bass ridden riffs of "Man the Traps" (a potential follow up single).

Full of surprises and never wanting to come down, this is an essential album for anyone who enjoys heavy music. It goes through a tour of all the classic metal styles, while keeping it fresh in an original way, much like Refused's "The Shape of Punk to Come". It's not surprising that the last 4 minutes of 8 minute finale "Reach up to the Gods" is simply ringing out, this time is spent for the listener to come down from the adrenaline rush this album makes, it's just that good. Make sure you catch this album live and cherish it, you'll regret missing out on such an exciting time. -Adam Turner-Heffer