Showing posts with label Mathcore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mathcore. Show all posts

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Arms - 2012 Bunk Alchemy


Band : Arms
Album : Bunk Alchemy
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
01 - Alpha
02 - Graph
03 - Pope
04 - Teeths
05 - Moth
06 - Exchange
07 - Apothecary
08 - Index
09 - Grain
10 - Ambix

Ex/Members of CIty Of Ifa, With My Bear Hands, and Remy Lebeau. For fans of COI, The Number 12, check them out now!! Highly Recommended!!
 
 
 
 
 

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Botch - 2007 We Are The Romans (Deluxe Edition)


Band : Botch
Album : We Are The Romans (Deluxe Edition)
Release Year : 2007
Genre : Hardcore | Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
CD1
1. To Our Friends In the Great White North
2. Mondrian Was A Liar
3. Transitions From Persona To Object
4. Swimming the Channel vs. Driving the Chunnel
5. C. Thomas Howell as the “Soul Man”
6. Saint Matthew Returns to the Womb
7. Frequency Ass Bandit
8. I Wanna be a Sex Symbol On My Own Terms
9. Man The Ramparts
10. Thank God for Worker Bees (Remix)
CD2
1. To Our Friends In the Great White North (Demo)
2. I Wanna be a Sex Symbol On My Own Terms (Demo)
3. Transitions From Persona To Object (Demo)
4. Mondrian Was A Liar (Demo)
5. Saint Matthew Returns to the Womb (Demo)
6. C. Thomas Howell as the “Soul Man" (Demo)
7. Man The Ramparts (Demo)
8. Saint Matthew Returns to the Womb (Live)
9. Vietmam (Live)
10. Transitions From Persona To Object (Live)
11. Hutton’s Great Heat Engine (Live)

Originally issued in 1999, We Are the Romans was Botch’s second full-length, but to the chagrin of many, was also their last. Though the breakup occurred two years after the release of this, their swansong, the Washingtonians left such an indelible mark on the scene that their concepts would turn up later in the music of bands like Norma Jean, among myriad others. Thankfully, Botch seem steadfast in their decision to remain disbanded, and rather than reunite, former members continue to forge ahead with new, musical endeavors such as Minus the Bear, Onalaska, Roy, and These Arms Are Snakes. After all, a reunion could result in a comeback album, which would inevitably pale in relation to previous installments in their discography. Speaking of their catalog, the remastered Deluxe Edition of We Are the Romans is the finale of the Botch re-release treatment that covered 061502, Unifying Themes Redux, and American Nervoso. So fitting it is that their quintessential album has been expanded by one whole disc, which offers most of the recordings in demo form, and a few live tracks. It goes without saying that “To Our Friends in the Great White North” and “Mondrian Was a Liar” are no less hard-hitting nor infectious as they were seven years ago – prior to the alarming surge of metalcore and post-hardcore. Other intricate, raging numbers like “Transition from Persona to Object,” “C. Thomas Howell as the ‘Soul Man,’” “Saint Matthew Returns to the Womb,” “Frequency Ass Bandit,” and “I Wanna Be a Sex Symbol on My Own Terms” are convoluted yet fully comprehensible, though a mid-paced song such as “Swimming the Channel vs. Driving the Chunnel” possesses a sound that the Neur-Isis niche is now known for.  When discussing We Are the Romans, one need mention the 10-minute “Man the Ramparts,” which is the longest, most climactic of the lot. The midsection chanting is unique, but more importantly, effective too.

As noted above, the second disc has a wealth of demos up for grabs, and surprisingly, each is of high quality in both production and execution. Further endearing is the fact that studio banter personalizes each song. Otherwise, there are no major changes except for the significantly shorter, chant-free “Man the Ramparts.” The four live renditions are satisfying, if muddy or flimsy, and Botch fans will definitely recognize “Vietmam” from their sole EP An Anthology of Dead Ends and “Hutton’s Great Heat Engine” from their debut American Nervoso.

Despite the asinine song titles – that part of the quartet’s trickle-down influence I could do without – We Are the Romans is required listening for anyone who has even a casual affinity for this particular style. While metalcore has a less than favorable image these days, and though there are anomalies to the following claim, there was once a time when it could be played innovatively and with verve. Botch’s catalog proves just that.

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Exotic Animal Petting Zoo - 2012 Tree of Tongues


Band : Exotic Animal Petting Zoo
Album : Tree of Tongues
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Experimental | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1. Pharmacokinetic
2. Thorough.Modern.
3. You Make Wonderful Pictures
4. Through the Thicket... Across Endless Mountains
5. M.U.M.B.
6. Apis Bull
7. The Great Explainer
8. Kaspar Hauser Could See the Stars in the Daytime
9. Gypsy Among the Pines
10. Whores of Babel
11. Arcology

The biggest problem with Exotic Animal Petting Zoo to date has been whether to take them seriously or not. With their outlandish name matched vibrantly with their song titles it was often disconcerting to put hope in a band that sang about “Richard Dean Anderson/One Is In Sheol, the Pit”. So with their sophomore album all (two or three) eyes were on the band to deliver something meaningful, something “fans” could legitimately defend. Well Tree of Tongues is here and nothing is answered but that may be the point. Tongues dives into a rabbit hole everyone was afraid to acknowledge, but many knew hid wonders. It envelops the listener almost immediately into a world only mad men live and is amplified by its stunning beauty. Though faults lay in its predictability and almost refusal to sneak back into the crazy song structures their debut was heralded for, Tongues mostly succeeds because, though normal in its appearance, it’s batshit fucking crazy. -controlled (sputnicmusic)





Kusudama - 2009 Jazz TV (EP)


Band : Kusudama
Album : Jazz TV (EP)
Release Year : 2009
Genre : Experimental | Jazzcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1 - Mary Had A Little Lamb
2 - Wonderful World
3 - 5-6-5-7
4 - Summertime

What have to lead a musician to start a radical experiment with jazz? Somebody needs to unite in one team, as it was happened with a «Kusudama» Minsk band in 2009. They hadn’t spent much time for throes of creation and investigating, but immediately decided to play “jazzcore”. Mixing jazz with mathcore and adding it all with humor and colorful healthy schizophrenia.

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Thursday, October 4, 2012

American Womanhood - 2012 AmericanWomanhood '12 Demo


Band : American Womanhood
Album : AmericanWomanhood '12 Demo
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Chaotic | Hardcore | Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist:
1. Allison the Sniffer
2. Cheeseburger In Paradise And Put Up A Parking Lot
3. Feyonce
4. Blanket Forts Everyday

American Womanhood is a Baltimore, Maryland hardcore band. The band was founded in early 2010 with a desire to perform and record fast, chaotic, heavy music without resorting to cliche breakdowns or other generic metal stereotypes. American Womanhood loves playing basement shows and small venues. Floors always trump stages. And you never know what singers Marc Dyer and Asa Gillis will do in the midst of a set.

This band is so fucking good, playing from mathrock to mathcore to gringcore to chaos!!! If anyone here have their first album "An Ungrateful Ghost Gets the Gift of Life" please let me know, cause i can't find it inside the net!!! :D





Monday, August 27, 2012

Gernika - 2012 Gregarious


Band : Gernika
Album : Gregarious
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Southern | Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
1. Libations
2. Steadfast
3. Badger
4. Crotchety
5. Night-Bumps
6. Columbine Was An Inside Job
7. Coin
8. Wet Naps
9. I-69247365
10. Majin Kulam
11. Verve

Gernika was formed in the spring of 2009 in Boise, Idaho. The original members of Gernika consisted of Drew Lockhart on vocals, Manuel Asumendi on guitar, CJ Taylor on bass, and Dellstan Fillmore on drums. In the summer of 2009, Gernika released their first demo titled "Keep on Truckin'" and would play a small northwest US tour. In the winter of 2009 Dellstan Fillmore left Gernika for Big Judds (a...resturant, not a band). Soon after losing thier drummer, Manuel Asumendi and CJ Taylor joined The Franklin Coverup, where they met drummer Brett Hawkins. Brett Hawkins soon joined Gernika as their drummer in the spring of 2010. Gernika then played many consecutive shows around Idaho through the end of the summer of 2010 and attempted to record a full length CD. Shortly after the summer of 2010, Brett Hawkins was asked to leave Gernika due to conflicting ideas for the future of Gernika. Open tryouts were soon held for a new drummer in the fall of 2010, where they found Jake Little. CJ also soon left down a different path. Now with the current line up of Drew Lockhart on vocals, Manuel Asumendi on guitar, Keith Spencer on Bass, and Jake Little on drums, we recorded the Self-Titled EP which is for sale at our shows or available for download at www.gernika.bandcamp.com. Just get it some how.

Well, here's the new album by Gernika. it's kinda disappointed when i listen to the first track from this album, i'm afraid that they lose their math/prog/chaotic style on this album, but damn i was wrong, after i listen to the whole track, i think this album is better than their previous released, and i've got no words to say about it. Ok, no more bullshit here, you better check this one out by yourself, enjoy, and don't forget to support the band!!!





Errata - 2012 Cognac Al Dente


Band : Errata
Album : Cognac Al Dente
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Chaotic | Mathcore | Jazz | Experimental

Tracklist :
01. Have Another Scone
02. Gondola
03. Miss Discord
04. Venus En Code
05. Post-Coital 15%

From freaky clown porn, painted homage’s to the Bee Gees on velvet to bootleg Chinese occult movies, everything you crave is at your nasty little fingertips. In a random happenstance stumbling of clicks, and tweets I was directed to a band out of Australia called Errata, and man, the noise from the other side of the world is chaotic, and mighty. The profile of the band is very tongue in cheek, but literal, with a sense of chaotic, shameless miasma that frequents Jacob Bannon’s Absolutely Essential To Music label Death Wish. Errata, is an artistically violent snuff film of a band. Errata’s sound is a welcome harken back to a sound that I thought was all but mummified. Flashes of mid to late nineties technical hardcore wrapped in devastatingly viable riffs paint a vivid picture of a sonic morgue with screeching guitar riffs that one minute are Pg. 99 and the next are straight off a Mike Patton record. One minute it’s artistic torture orgy with bells and whistles and whispers into the mic ala Nick Cave, and the next second is bloody fucking terror featuring the best riffs Orchid or Love Lost but Not Forgotten never used. 

To hear a band actually get the timings right, to understand it’s not ALL about the brutality, is plainly, refreshing. It’s great to see that so far away, just maybe something is brewing that isn’t just a simple chugging riff that you can bounce around to. There are no basketball shorts or straight brimmed baseball hats. No one is slapping their chests in an effort to prove who’s the mightier shaved ape. This is the thinking man’s game. Colorful busts of machine gun tempos wrapped in full figured slam fuck legs, it’s sexy as a used whore left for dead, but carefully placed just so, so that the police are left stupefied by the killers motive. There is a group of people who desire to ride a musical rollercoaster, to feel like they’re charting into the unknown. There’s a violent mystery in the absence of austerity, and letting all of the nicks and scars show in scrawled, pugnacious tones.Errata showcase moments of Candiria before they went all Christian, and terrible are resound through their debut record “Cognac El Dente”

“Cognac el Dente” is a solid first offering that has fits of musical identity crisis in one fitting, Picasso on speed, but making out with a razor blade kind of way. Errata have fits of whiskey, and good pot induced stoner jams for a second, while the art school drop out comes screaming back within seconds.

“Cognac el Dente” is a view into the mind of where The Postman Syndrome should have went. The timings with the off kilter jazz saxophone are a fun, deliberate punch in the neck, on the track “Gondola”, but the real absolute chainsaw to the head, chair through the window craziness that true tech head seek is right in the opening seconds of “Miss Dischord”. Calling back to a sound of when Dillinger Escape Plan was still relevant, it’s a furious piece with sonic layers of Mike Patton, Isis, and some Kid A era Radiohead.

This isn’t mindless noodling for the sake of having fast fingers, or technical prowess, it’s a powerful exorcism in displaying that the kids who grew up on Botch, Coalesce, Converge, Pig Destroyer, the aforementioned DEP, and various Mike Patton projects, may have grown up a little, but are still capable of crushing blasts of brilliance.Errata are creating some wonderful violence in the poisonous vacuum known as Australia. -Robert Dean (MoonRunner)





Me and Him Call It Us - 2003 The (C:) Drive Of Love Series


Band : Me and Him Call It Us
Album : The (C:) Drive Of Love Series
Release Year : 2003
Genre : Grindcore | Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
1. Number One
2. There Is No Question Mark Button On This Computer
3. Intermission I: The Hollow Anchor's Despair
4. Innocent Bystanders Watched In Horror As Peter Jennings Drew His Murder Weapon
5. Intermission II: The Suspense, Prorogation, And Finally Descent Of Edwin Daunterbury
6. Infrared Light; Don't Talk To Me About Quantum Physics
7. Intermission III: The Pale Ghost At Sea And The Fingers Aquiver
8. A Rotten Set Of Bagpipes Can Make A Fantastic Miniskirt If Sewn Properly
9. Intermission IV: May The Tide Companion Thee To Shore

Me and HIm Call It Us are good at their game. One thing I like in particular is the lack of constant blast beats. Not that I don't enjoy the occasional 210 bpm blast, but I certainly don't enjoy my entire 45 second song to be blasted. This means that one can actually tell the difference between each song, a nice touch that some grind bands forget about.

However, the thing that makes this album so great is not the lack of blast beats but instead the fact that this is a true album, rahter than a random compilation of songs. I'm not saying that I think endless hours of thought went into assembling the songs in a perfect order, but I do believe that they did a fine job. The reason I like the way it is put together is the opposite methods of music presented in the album. Imagine a song by some progressive metal band. It has the heavy sections, it has the light sections, and though they have a different style or modd, they are still never too far removed from each other. On this album, the intermissions are dramatically different from the songs.

One might think it ironic that the intermissions are so considerably longer than the "feature" songs on the album but I don't. I feel like each feature is such a blast of power that one needs recovery time in a sense and that recovery time is longer than the actual event. I guess I will equate it to a broken bone. It happens fast and hard and the recovery time is long.

I feel somewhat uncomfortable calling this straight grind because it's not (actually, i would've called it grindcore but I won't comment on my opinion of the difference between grind and grindcore here). Maybe I'd call it experimental or progressive grind, but lately, it seems like all the good grind bands are doing something different. Needless to say that isn't a bad thing but the genre is in a way falling apart because so few of the bands actually sound the same, they just happen to have one overriding style that comes back and links them. For example, A Rotten Set Of Bagpipes Can Make A Fantastic Miniskirt If Sewn Properly has a section that verges on doom. A number of the songs feature nearly beatdownable breakdowns were it not for the fact that they are so short. I like this band and what they do. They aren't perfect but they are good and they have some really cool ideas. -Dancin' Man (SputnikMusic)





Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Tears|Before - 2012 Minus


Band : Tears|Before
Album : Minus
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Chaotic | Hardcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1. None
2. Pornography In The 30's
3. Walter Jr
4. Lou Rhodes
5. Home
6. Pavillon
7. Vibes
8. Providence

TEARS|BEFORE is a post/mathcore band from Italy, born in 2007 after several lineup changes. They combine different influencies such as Converge, Meshuggah, early Norma Jean, Neurosis, Unsane, Architects… In 2009 they released their debut EP “Reversal” through a coproduction between the band and four labels. This is their new album "Minus". Enjoy and support the band!!!





Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Gaza - 2012 No Absolutes In Human Suffering


Band : Gaza
Album : No Absolutes In Human Suffering
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Chaotic | Hardcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1. Mostly Hair and Bones Now
2. This We Celebrate
3. The Truth Weighs Nothing
4. Not With All the Hope in the World
5. The Vipers
6. No Absolutes in Human Suffering
7. The Crown
8. When They Beg
9. Winter in Her Blood
10. Skull Trophy
11. Routine and Then Death

Gaza is an experimental metal band from Salt Lake City, Utah that incorporates elements of grindcore, mathcore, and sludge into their music. Formed in 2004, they are currently signed to Black Market Activities and have released one EP and three full-length albums. They are known for their complex and heavy sound, as well as their outspoken anti-religious and political views.
 
At some moments, Gaza are nearly as overwhelming in their rage and misanthropy as Khanate or Today Is The Day, with all instruments (voice included) howling out in mad agony at the world around them.

Of course, all artists respond to their environment, but this band is one of the lucky few that can express the abyss of human emotion through channels that an audience can respect for its eloquent musicality as much as its raw energy. Rather than relying solely on the traditional array of ‘heavy’ techniques—blastbeats, breakdowns, pinch harmonics, extreme dissonance, etc.—Gaza draw deeply from wells across the entire metal community and resourcefully come up with some tricks of their own.
Gaza shares members with Bird Eater.





Ed Gein - 2005 Judas Goats And Dieseleaters


Band : Ed Gein
Album : Judas Goats And Dieseleaters
Release Year : 2005
Genre : Mathcore | Grindcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
1) Robert Flaig
2) Small Towns, Small Minds
3) Killing A Co-Worker
4) Pee Wee Herman/Paul Reubens
5) We're Drowning In It
6) Amen
7) Christianity As Foreign Policy
8) United Ninety Three
9) Bastard
10) A Conflict Of Interest
11) The Wool Is Pulled
12) Guilty As Charged
13) This Ends Now
14) Breed (Nirvana cover)

Ed Gein’s second full-length, Judas Goats & Dieseleaters, was the first album that I listened to that could be classified as grind. While I know it’s fairly new, I still have to give it props for introducing me into the grind genre. The thing about grind is a majority of the listeners will hear nothing but deep-throated growls and high-pitched shrieks and label it off as screaming for the sake of screaming. The saddest part about that is that some of the bands in this genre are pretty talented, while others, like Watchmaker, throw their songs together and write them inside the studio. Thankfully, Ed Gein stays on the talented side and doesn’t just use hundreds of tempo changes each song to classify as being technical.Judas Goats & Dieseleaters is surprisingly filled with a lot of depth for an album in the grind genre. 
 
While listening to the album, it at first seems to be one variation of the same exact song, but upon closer inspection, each song is loaded with tons of unique riffs and at least keep it interesting. Tracks like "Killing the Co-Worker" and "We’re Drowning in It" slow it down and mix elements of metalcore with grind and tons of chaotic riffs over an abundance of shouting. Then on songs like "Bastard" and "Amen," Ed Gein blazes through with the distorted guitars, blast beats, and pure shouting that makes a grind band what they are.

Ed Gein is simply one of the better listens that I’ve been recently craving. Its variety of tempos and structures allow for an easy-to-swallow grind experience that still retains all the distorted guitars, fast drumming, and shouting that is expected in this genre. The only fault with Ed Gein is that, being a grind band, unless you thoroughly inspect the songs, they still manage to blend into each other too much, even when a healthy dose of variety is used.





Monday, August 6, 2012

Coilguns - 2012 Stadia Rods


Band : Coilguns
Album : Stadia Rods
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Progressive | Chaotic | Hardcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1 - Parkensine
2 - Zoetropist
3 - In The Limelights
4 - Witness The Kern Arc
5 - The Shuftan Process part 1
6 - The Shuftan Process part 2

La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. While most people from this town spend their lives handcrafting complicated mechanisms for use in luxury watches, Coilguns have been busy crafting complex mechanisms of their own.

Coilguns is fast and like things to move forward quicker than usual. After a year of existence, 2 EP’s, a few good support slots like The Dillinger Escape Plan and a successful first headlining tour in Europe in september 2011, the band already started booking a second european run for the spring of 2012. Also meant to be released for that tour, a fancy 10’ vinyl version of “Stadia Rods” and a limited UK version CD of the same recording through Scottish DIY label Dead Dead Dead Music.

Citing bands like Converge, Dillinger Escape Plan, Cursed,Breach or Botch, Coilguns live up to their name delivering sonic projectiles at extremely high velocity.





Sunday, July 22, 2012

The Prestige - 2012 Black Mouths


Band : The Prestige
Album : Black Mouths
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Post-Hardcore | Chaotic | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1. The Truth
2. Burn Down Vegas
3. Ballroom
4. Crane Flies
5. The Never Ending End
6. Pluie
7. Forward
8. Backward
9. A Thousand Trees in My Closet
10. Hooks and Lips

In 2009, only 6 months after its birth, The Prestige released its critically acclaimed A Series of Catastrophes and Consequences that shaded their genre into an adrenaline-fueled posthardcore. In 2011, Black Mouths emphasizes their unique style to a raw and intense hardcore rock sound with strong rock and punk influences along with subtle and breathtaking interludes. “We never tried nor intend to fit in one particular genre. The main goal is to be honest and true to ourselves, and to have a shit load of fun” adds drummer Thibaut.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Marta Prell - 2012 - Versus Songs


Band : Marta Prell
Album : Versus Songs
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Mathcore

Tracklist :
 01. Смерть Против Смерти
02. Скорлупа
03. Бесконечное Шило Безумия
04. Мертвое Диско
05. Большой Брат Следит За Тобой
06. Пропасти
07. Закаты (feat. Олег - Tony Fanconi)
08. Мосты
09. Инструментал
10. Капсулы Смерти

Samara post-hardcore team, founded in 2009 by Rustam (vocals). Finally formed in autumn 2011 with the arrival of the team, Dmitry (guitar) and Dima Novikov (Bass). In the spring of 2012 they began to record their debut full-length album,'' Versus Songs'' Enjoy!!!
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Julia Set - 2012 The Julia Set EP


Band : The Julia Set
Album :  The Julia Set EP
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Mathcore | Experimental
 
Tracklist :
1.The Arsonist
2.John Galt
3.French Girls
4.Cut It With A Spoon

The Julia Set is a mathcore band from Montreal, QC. This is their debute EP and it sounds really reminds me with the old Dillinger Escape Plan!!! If you don't know them, well, check them out now, this one is really good!!!
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Aphrodite's Baby - 2012 90


Band : Aphrodite's Baby
Album : 90
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Mathcore | Experimental
 
Tracklist :
1.Larry Kubiac. Featuring Paolo Colavolpe (DESTRAGE)
2.Danny Madigan. Featuring Mathieu Dottel (Bukowski)
3.Axel Stone. Feat Jeff Wood (Shat, Ex-DEP)
4.Hocus Locust. Feat Matthieu Renaud (DEEP IN HATE)

Aphrodite Baby was created by Jo and Rudy several years ago. In spite of the Rudy’s sadness because of the loss of his friend, he found the strengh to carry on their project.
Not until 2010 did APHRODITE’S BABY find the right line-up. After 10 months of writing, Rudy (ex – GMBC), Youcef, Fabien and Anthony (ex – Fedhja) are bring out their first 5 title album « Team Backward » dedicated to the memory of the founder, for the soul purpuse of making people twist on their angry Rock’N’Roll. And this is their new EP, please buy it if you really like it!! Enjoy!!!





Thursday, March 22, 2012

Botch - 2007 American Nervoso (Reissue)


Band : Botch
Album : American Nervoso (Reissue)
Release Year : 2007
Genre : Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
1. Hutton’s Great Heat Engine
2. John Woo
3. Dali’s Praying Mantis
4. Dead For A Minute
5. Oma
6. Thank God For Worker Bees
7. Rejection Spoken Softly
8. Spitting Black
9. Hives
10. Stupid Me
11. Spitting Black (Extended Version)
12. Hutton’s Great Heat Engine (Demo)
13. Rejection Spoken Softly (Demo)
14. John Woo (Demo)

One album prior to Botch's landmark effort, We Are the Romans, came American Nervoso, the metal(lichard)core act's first full-length. While proving to be not quite as influential or accomplished as Romans, Nervoso was a frothing, still technical and confrontational album that was no less heavy and even a bit more dissonant, fitting in perfectly with their mid-to-late`90s brethren of the time (Converge, Coalesce). The latest offering in Hydra Head's recent flurry of activity regarding the pioneering quartet is a remixed and remastered reissue of that 1998 album along with a couple bonuses thrown on for good measure.

Standard album numbers like "Dali's Praying Mantis" proved the band weren't humorless brutes, as it was a nearly all-instrumental attack that seemed to pre-date the overuse of "horror chords" that popped up later across the rosters of Trustkill and Solid State Records, with the song having one solitary lyric: a repetitive yell of "yeah!" Brutal cuts like the solid "Dead for a Minute" and "Oma" channeled the metallic aggression of the band's own influences (Unbroken, Deadguy), but even the latter of those closes with Tim Latona's solemn piano coda.

The new, more aural setting applied to Nervoso makes songs much more clearer and dynamic as well. "Thank God for Worker Bees" starts with dusty drums that sound programmed and distorted vocals until the band's groove-oriented bombast and shapeshifting, heavy angularity comes into play, conveying an astute sense of soft/loud / restrained/aggressive.

With only nine songs on the original release, a "new" song, "Stupid Me" (taken from the Nervoso sessions one would assume), plus an extended version of "Spitting Black" and demo versions of three other tracks fills out Nervoso quite well -- in fact, it pushes it to just over fifty minutes' running time. There's nothing particularly mesmerizing about the additional offerings unless one claimed a sickening love for Nervoso and wished to dissect every differentiating nuance, but their presence is certainly no detriment to the reissue. "Stupid Me" is an impressive number though, as it's much more intense than the majority of the album that precedes it and makes crafty use of interchanging, frenetic riffs.

American Nervoso may not be regarded as Botch's pinnacle but it's certainly where they thrust into the door of the metal/hardcore scene and made their inkling, showing that their craft had reached a serious developmental point that would only prove to be the tip of a towering, threatening (and consequently crumbling and tumbling) iceberg. -Brian (Punknews.org)






Wednesday, February 29, 2012

The Dillinger Escape Plan - 2001 The Dillinger Escape Plan EP (Reissue)


Band : The Dillinger Escape Plan
Album : The Dillinger Escape Plan EP (Reissue)
Release Year : 2001
 Genre : Mathcore | Experimental

Tracklist :
 1. Proceed With Caution
2. I love Secret Agents
3. Monticello
4. Cleopatra's sling
5. Caffeine
6. Revenge of the Porno Clowns (Three for Flinching)
7. Sugar Coated Sour (Live)
8. Abe The Cop (Live)
9. The Running Board (Live)

It's fairly obvious that Dillinger hadn't worked out their sound at this point. While it's still pretty damn heavy, this album is a lot less heavier then Running Board and Calculating Infinity. It's also a lot less weird and chaotic. There's still weird time signatures, but overall, Dillinger just sound like a weird Metalcore band on this CD, instead of the crazy Grindcore/Punk/Metal/Jazz band they became later on.
All in all, I really liked this album. The production wasnt too great, but it was good to hear Dimitri's vocals turned up a lot. It's fairly obvious though that Dillinger hadnt worked out there sound yet though. I'd actually recommend this as a good introduction, as its not as weird as any of their other stuff. Miss MAchine is heavier then this..Anywy, I highly recommend this.






Narrows - 2012 Painted


Band : Narrows
Album : Painted
Release Year : 2012
 Genre : Hardcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1. Under the Guillotine
2. TB Positive
3. Absolute Betrayer
4. Greenland
5. It's the Water
6. Face Paint
7. Final Mass
8. SST

Narrows are a collaboration between former members of Botch, These Arms Are Snakes, Unbroken and Some Girls. They took the metalcore formula and churned in some Swans-like darkwave, art rock, British shoegaze and ambient noise on their debut album, 2009’s New Distances. But on Painted, they don’t think quite so hard; instead, Narrows use their instinctual gut-bile to craft tunes such as “”It’s The Water,”” which is just over two minutes of distorted bass, spacey guitars and a mid-song slide-guitar refrain that’s out of this world. Sure, there are longer songs on here—the eight-plus minutes of “Greenland” meander a bit too much, actually—but by that point, they’ve already hit us with “Absolute Betrayer,” a downright unsettling bit of gothy riff-core and “TB Positive,” which kind of sounds like caged animals being dropped out of a plane.

It should be said that vocalist Dave Verellen is arguably the best vocalist of the metalcore genre, but on Painted, he’s able to temper his lion-like bellow with odd yelps and the random touch of melody. (Those with normal vocal cords would not be able to pull off the harrowing opening scream-ramble of “Face Paint.”) Verellen is a beast, that’s established, but everyone here is completely amped up. The guitar work by Ryan Frederiksen (ex-These Arms Are Snakes) and Jodie Cox (ex-Bullet Union) is unrelenting and inventive. Bassist Rob Moran (ex-Some Girls/Unbroken) should put in a patent request for his crunchy, distorted bass sound. And put drummer Sam Stothers (ex-Makeout Boys) in a mentorship program with heavy hitters such as Dave Grohl and Bill Ward ASAP, because this guy has machines for arms.

One warning: Don’t listen to Painted late at night while lying in bed with the lights out. It will come at you like a demented fever dream, and you’d be better off just re-watching the unspeakable scenes in that terrifying horror movie that scarred you for life as a child. Heed our words: Painted is some seriously scary rock music. -Jason Schreurs (altpress)






Fitful - 2012 Concerning Deterioration


Band : Fitful
Album : Concerning Deterioration
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Screamo | Chaotic | Grindcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
1. High Aspirations
2. Fuck You
3. Crowquill Catharsis
4. Celeste
5. Keep Siege
6. Eyelashes
7. Deterioration of Self
8. I Made a Mistake
9. Apology
10. This Had to Be Done

For any album with ten tracks clocking in at ten minutes long, grindcore is the first obvious genre to come to mind. While it's true that Fitful's debut album, Concerning Deterioration, focuses on short bursts like grindcore, it is less worried about speed and more focused on the tasteful integration of intelligence with heavier music. Yes, there are wailing, spastic guitars; yes, there are visceral, pummeling drums; yes, there are shouted vocals; however, there are so many redeeming qualities at work which truly make this album as artistic and elegant as yourRadiohead or Pink Floyd records.

The subject matter of this release alone is intriguing: each track details the abuse ("deterioration") of ten individuals in explicit detail, and it's made blatantly apparent. The vocals are pained, strained beyond belief, spouting off a combination of vague astrological allusions ("the bow is drawn / affixed to your oculus / the eye of Taurus") and upfront confessions of guilt and remorse ("it was selfish of me to feel pain from my suffering / so languid, so livid, so fearful, so fitful"). These lyrics, while sometimes difficult to decipher, complement the theme of the release by alienating the band from themselves and spewing the inner conflicts of each song's subject. Each track is a personality, both lyrically and literally, bridged together by concise interludes of guitar feedback and radio static.

Musically, each of the band's members are skilled and proficient with their instruments, with the ability to portray the turmoil of each individual perfectly. Unlike most of their contemporaries, there is a greater focus on delivering melodic guitar lines which complement and harmonize with each other in interesting rhythmic ways (i.e. "Keep Siege" and "Deterioration of Self", though each track is a highlight). While both guitarists are skilled, neither takes the obvious spotlight. Likewise, the bassist brilliantly avoids falling to the back of the mix with root notes by playing parts just as complex as the guitarists (i.e. "Celeste"), or even taking the melody, such as the first half of "I Made a Mistake". Perhaps the most skilled of them all is the drummer, who can surprisingly keep up and hold his weight amongst the other musicians, ensuring the ensemble never falls apart.

If anything, the care and attention to detail put into the compositions are commendable. The band rarely rests, with seething melodic lines and ghost notes from both sides of the stereo image. There’s hints of serialism in all the tracks, the most obvious being "Eyelashes", and too many odd time signatures to count. The changes, while abrupt, are so fluid and dramatic that it leaves you scratching your head, warranting a repeat listen. Best of all, when the band breaks into a solid 4/4 (i.e. the second half of “I Made a Mistake”), it just plain rocks.

If you love hardcore, or have an insatiable taste for intelligent music with spunky musicality, give this album a shot. It's definitely one of my highlights for the year, and it could be yours also. -gotikplage 






 
Fitful - 2012 Leave the Fucking House, Please
Band : Fitful
Album : Leave the Fucking House, Please
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Screamo | Chaotic | Grindcore | Mathcore

Tracklist :
01 Everything is Repetition
02 Nothing Tangible Validates My Existence
 03 You Deserve More