Band Spotlight
Chiodos
Perhaps no one can explain the sheer ferocity and timid quietness it is better than when vocalist Craig Owens says “we don’t want to let the kids down” when discussing the group’s intense vocals live at shows. Well they never let a single kid down with their vicious assault on the ears and grip on the jugular...
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03.09.2007 by J-Sin
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Music Reviews of Hardcore, Crust, Post-Hardcore, Metalcore
Cristalix — Cristalix Buy it at Amazon
Imagine if you could really drill a hole in your head. I mean it would be fantastic. Finally you could see what would happen if your brain had a big hole in it. Or you could listen to this self-titled EP. Cristalix might not be the worst band in recent memory but they’re closer than a match to a cigarette. It is funny to hear a band this terrible try so damn hard—metalcore that sounds so recycled it belongs in some sort of bin.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Cristalix, Cristalix, metal, metalcore, CD Review, music, review
Born / Dead — Endless War: Repetition Buy it at Amazon
I'm sure the soldiers deployed in Iraq for some three or four years now probably feel the same way of this album title. Collecting the vinyl-only releases of Born/Dead's career, this Oakland hardcore punk group grounds your head and body into a beaten slop of meat. Anarchist lyrics and abrasive guitars chortle with throaty vocals and declarations of driving punk rock anthems. Fast pseudo power-violence like this can be crusty punks best import.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Born / Dead, Endless War: Repetition, metal, power+violence, CD Review, music, review
The Black Maria — A Shared History of Tragedy Buy it at Amazon
The title of the album was pulled from a line from the HBO drama “Six Feet Under”, which vocalist Chris Gray felt best summed their experiences from the last year of touring. The Black Maria have once again lunched on catchy hooks with artistic rock veining through and through each diverse track. Once Grade’s guitarist Kyle Bishop left the band, many thought the band was doomed but they quickly swept up drummer Theo McKibbon and guitarist Scott Swain both of Ontario-based band Far From Heroes. After shrugging off those lineup changes, The Black Maria set about to record a dynamic post-hardcore indie rock album with producer Mike Green who has recorded with The Matches and Yellowcard previously. The band sounds a bit different—almost more ethereal—than last year’s debut “Lead Us to Reason” felt, but it’s just as good.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: The Black Maria, A Shared History of Tragedy, metal, post-hardcore, CD Review, music, review
On the Last Day — Meaning In the Static Buy it at Amazon
Their album title might have been derived after watching Michael Keaton in “White Noise” or reading up on Electronic Voice Phenomenon. But their brand of melodic hardcore is hardly going to be mistaken as either noise or as a phenomenon. Hailing from Seattle, On the Last Day travels down the familiar path that many hardcore bands in these MySpace days have journeyed down. That’s not to say that the music isn’t deftly packaged with ambitious songwriting or a lack of great caustic screams and melodic crooning. But we’ve heard this done before.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: On the Last Day, Meaning In the Static, metal, screamo, CD Review, music, review
Last Ditch Remedy — The Following Buy it at Amazon
“The Following” is the debut full-length by Last Ditch Remedy, a Washington state pop-punk/screamo quartet. Unlike a lot of their bubblegum brethren, Last Ditch Remedy doesn’t stick to the typical mall punk fodder in their lyrics. Instead they tackle things like the Iraq War, political cowardice, and more social affairs that teens deal with like divorce. Wrapped in a wrangling of punk melodies and sometimes screamy post-hardcore hooks, “The Following” is cut from the same mold as Anberlin (an admitted influence) and Glassjaw.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Last Ditch Remedy, The Following, metal, post-hardcore, CD Review, music, review
Autumn Black — Beneath the Shadows Buy it at Amazon
Metalcore outfit boasts a “singer/screamer”. But he can’t sing so much as he can sound like he’s constipated and squeezing out a few. He can’t scream either without sounding strained. Fortunately he’s backed up by equally derivative and yawning numb metalcore so no one will really care how shitty the vocalist is when the entire outfit needs to be hit by a speeding truck.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Autumn Black, Beneath the Shadows, metal, metalcore, CD Review, music, review
Few and the Proud — Stampede Buy it at Amazon
Yo what up Chicago straight-edge hardcore? We know you’ve been sorely missed since the glory days. Chugga chugga guitars and drums that sound like they’ve been taped up from the thrashing that they’ve had to endure give it a pissed-off fist-in-the-face type of honesty. Vicious vocals that spit out “fuck you” type of inspirations from a band who cull their name from the Marines’ advertisements. Did you forget about hardcore legends Slapshot or Judge? These guys haven’t.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Few and the Proud, Stampede, CD Review, music, review
Daughters — Hell Songs Buy it at Amazon
Their vocalist reminds me so much of the dude from Rapider than Horsepower it’s crazy. Daughters has come and conquered the spazz grind scene from the crust punk and tech-metal kids who made it a little too cool to write chaos into a 3-minute opus of filth. Engineered by Andrew Schneider whose resume includes some beguiling and bewildering entries like Keelhaul, Cave In, Blue Man Group (what?!), and Scissorfight, “Hell Songs” rests close to Oxbow and the Dillinger Escape Plan occupying that artistic land like an Israeli squatter in an illegal settlement in Gaza. Spastic hardcore that fans out tickling and tantalizing your senses with dissonance and discordant guitar fantasies. Huge percussion with speedy double bass enters in spicing things up for a gracious out-of-control high-speed spin. Imagine if the chaotic whirlwind of Melt Banana took things into art rock’s arena, smoked a lot of Doomriders’s weed (an outfit they toured with), ate a pasture’s worth of magic mushrooms, and took enough crystal meth to make a trailer park blush. That’s the first image that comes to mind. Now sit back and imagine what would happen if you listened to the entire album? Juicy guitar that bites your hand off. Exhausting song structures that don’t have a prayer of being replicated by even the most fantastic and studied musicians. Blast beats with paroxysmal shifts in tempo and time signatures that change on the drop of a dime. Heavy metal was a concept that came up a long time ago but it never really meant anything until Daughters showed up.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Daughters, Hell Songs, CD Review, music, review
The Bronx — The Bronx Buy it at Amazon
The Bronx apparently forgot what hardcore punk was all about on their very heralded release. I guess that’s why they got picked up by a major label and were featured on MySpace. Go get a Kyuss album, you won’t regret it. What a complete disappointment given how good some of their earlier stuff was.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: The Bronx, The Bronx, CD Review, music, review
Hostility — Uncompromised Buy it at Amazon
Yelled vocals with big guitars that shred riffs left and right along with huge drums, Hostility was born in high school in ’98. Thick chugga chugga riffs complicate matters. They’re most definitely another rung on the metalcore ladder. If you’ve been listening to metal for the past couple of years than you’ve heard “Uncompromised” all before (can you say Killswitch Engage?). It’s not bad but man is this genre tired.
- J-Sin
Technorati tags: Hostility, Uncompromised, CD Review, music, review
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