Tithe - Communion In Anguish (Profound Lore Records) [Sasa]
A three-piece extreme grinding death metal band made up of Matt Eiseman (vocalist/guitarist), Alex Huddleston (vocalist/bassist) and Kevin Swartz (drummer), Tithe's new album Communion In Anguish is seven tracks of dissonant death metal.
The Chameleons are one of if not the most underrated post punk band of the 1980s. Them, along with The Wedding Present, at least from an American point of view, never got their due here in the States. Script Of The Bridge and What Does Anything Mean?
The opener, Where Are You? is perfect post punk circa 1985 or now, whichever you pick. The guys sound great and the band is super tight. Lady Strange is the same, and shows me that Teenage Fanclub must have been big fans too.
Fans of The Chameleons getting their first new record from the band in 24 years will be very happy with Arctic Moon. The songs are all a bit too long, but hey, The Chameleons have a new record for the first time in 24 years.
I seem to be getting a lot of records like this. It all seemed to start most recently with Tailgunner’s Guns For Hire album, but the reality is that there’s been a glut of old sounding new and very young bands trying to create the era of the parents’ youth, not to mention a bunch of oldsters who never got anywhere at the time dusting off material lost to the intervening four decades, but this is a definite trend.
One thing in their favour: Crucible have managed to capture the sense of speed and immediacy that old recordings done in limited studio windows very well, without losing all the advantages modern technology has afforded production values.
Then there are the tracks. These are all solid, fast-paced and anthemic riff-driven songs with some hugely solid instrumental work creating a highly impactful delivery, wrapped in some well thought out arrangements. The vocals are the one area that I’m struggling with though.
Walls - Endeavour Of Destruction (Self Released) [GC]
I always find reviewing new music a bit of a mine field as we usually get a PR kit with releases and sometimes I read them and just wish I hadn’t as some of the descriptions of the artists and their music sound very pretentious and way over the top.
Now I get its their job but it just seems unnecessary to me, today I read Belgian hardcore band Walls PR kit for their new EP Endeavour Of Destruction and it was really something!! There are lots of grand descriptions and promises of things you will only experience listening to this band?! Time to see if they deliver!
I am not instantly blow away by opener We All Suffer because one of the many differing influences they bang on about in their PR kit, nu-metal seems to be the main focus on this track with jilting time frames and squealing sounds covering everything and a bass heavy thud that drags and rumbles along, it never really picks up any pace and seems to form a track without any excitement, and it all just feels very meh to my ears.
White Ghoul attempts to offer more and while it does sound like a more formed song to begin with and has a half decent chug to it, we then get more of the angsty nu-metal woe is me stuff that sounded boring in 2003 so now it’s just not needed at all.
They switch between the heavier and mopey bits with limited success until Viper threatens to make me want to instantly give up and turn it off as it starts with some stupid electronic dance beat which does then actually make way for something with a bit of grit and energy but it doesn’t last for long and then we are back to the basic sounding nu-metal heavy core and its just not for me.
I don’t like the tone of the guitars and the mix feels horrible, I just don’t get this style of music at all and for people to call it hardcore actually really gets on my nerves.
Gears Of The Cold Machine almost promises to save the day but ultimately fails, it starts out ok enough but, very quickly we are right back to a very basic sounding chugathon that lacks any emotional depth or anything that really makes your hairs stand up on end its all just so insipid and bland sounding.
Thankfully Quicksand Part 2 (Not sure where part one is, but I also don’t realty care as that would be another track I had to listen too!) is the last track and they don’t do anything different to what you would have expected, they chug and holler as loudly as they can but ultimately deliver nothing you can get any sort of feeling out of and honestly I am just glad its all over now.
Walls made a lot of big promises and raised expectations for this EP and they delivered precisely none of them! This felt completely devoid of any real emotion, it felt forced and empty, you can try to be as heavy as you want but if there is no feeling or emotion to back it up you will ultimately fall flat.
This is exactly what Endeavour Of Destruction has done, I cannot emphasize enough that this is nowhere near a hardcore release this is a nu-metal core release if that’s even a thing? Whatever this EP is, unfortunately it’s not for me. 2/10
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