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Monday, 28 January 2019

Reviews: Dust Bolt, OOMPH!, Leash Eye, Tempest (Paul H)

Dust Bolt: Trapped In Chaos (Napalm Records)

The thrashers from Bavaria return with album number four and it’s an improvement on 2016’s decent Mass Confusion. There is more structure and melody to the songs, which still retain all the ferocity and thrashy goodness of their previous releases. The slow burning Another Day In Hell which closes the album has the Metallica feel but is constructed with thought and style. Elsewhere it’s all systems go from the powerful opener of The Fourth Strike which sets the tone and rages hard to the Hendrix riff hidden in the middle of the fiery Rhythm To My Madness. I was critical of Lenny B’s vocal delivery last time out but this time he’s on point with a snarl and urgency necessary for decent thrash metal. Crammed full of searing riffs, tracks such as Shed My Skin feel like old friends after just a couple of tracks. This band is improving, and whilst it’s never going to be ground breaking, their old school thrash metal is certainly on my radar once more. 8/10

OOMPH!: Ritual (Napalm Records)

It may come as a surprise to some that Rammstein were not the pioneers of the German Industrial rock movement. Having been raised on EBM, rock and new wave, OOMPH! were however, part of the so-called Neue Deutsche Härte dance scene that influenced Rammstein and many more. Ritual is the band’s 13th album, coming 27 years after their self-titled debut. The nucleus of the band has remained as it was since the band formed in Wolfsberg in 1989; Dero Goi – lead vocals, drums, programming, Andreas Crap – lead guitar, keyboards, backing vocals and Robert Flux – rhythm guitar, samples, bass guitar, backing vocals. Ritual is described by Goi as "Our most aggressive, heaviest and darkest album in a while." 

He’s not wrong, with a thumping opening triumvirate of Tausend Mann Und Ein Befehl, Achtung! Achtung! and Kein Liebeslied marching and stomping all over the place. Europa (feat. Chris Harms / Lord Of The Lost) is followed by a bit of a dancefloor monster, Im Namen Des Vaters which would qualify for any gym workout compilation. With much of the album tackling politics, war and abuse, there’s a bit of light relief with the splendid electro tune TRRR – FCKN – HTLR. I must admit that I’m not great overall with the German Dance Metal scene, but this is an album that really works. A one-off date at the Islington Academy in March should be an enjoyably moist affair. 8/10

Leash Eye: Blues, Brawls and Beverages (Self Released)

Poland isn’t exactly renowned for its southern hard rock, but Leash Eye have been flying the flag for several years. Originally focusing on grunge as you might expect for a band who started in 1996, they latterly changed their sound and now have a rich and warm style which is very much in keeping with the harder side of the Southern rock style. 2013’s Hard Truckin’ Rock is finally followed up with the gritty new release, Blues, Brawls And Beverages and it is a fine listen too. With some huge riffs, the Hammond sound of Piotr Skora’s keys adding depth to the tracks, and the whiskey-soaked vocals of Lukas Podorski giving the whole album gravitas. 

53 minutes of thunderous rock with a blues underbelly that demands attention from the start. On Fire is a foot stomping rocker, which is impossible not to get the head nodding. There are huge chunks of 1970s Deep Purple which appear nicely throughout the 11 tracks and at times the album veers sharply away from the Southern rock to a more straightforward hard rock style; One Last Time is a prime example. Throbbing keys, crashing cymbals and soaring vocals all work to solid effect on an album that doesn’t disappoint in anyway. 7/10

Tempest: Reflections (Self Released)
Crushing riffs, soaring clean vocals that interchange with gruff singing at rapid speed, and battering drums. Yep, it’s another metalcore album. This time from Eastbourne based Tempest. It’s routine stuff I’m afraid, and whilst it is skilfully compiled, after about track five it’s all just a little bit repetitive; such is the genre. 

Typical metalcore with clean and gruff vocals interchanging relentlessly, savage guitars and frantic drumming and very little which sticks in the memory for more than a couple of seconds. I’m sure if you like this style of metal then this may well be one of the emerging bands on the scene, but it does little for me. Sorry. 5/10

Reviews: Fever 333, Puppy, Breathe Atlantis, Bury The Traitor (Reviews By Alex)

Fever 333: Strength In Numb333rs (Roadrunner Records/333 Wreckords Crew)

Capricious passion spills from every aspect of Fever 333. Unsurprising, given their lineup consists of members from Letlive, The Chariot and Night Verses. Together they create a powerful blend of metal, alternative and rap which is just as socially conscious as it is uplifting. My praise may seem odd, considering my apparent habit of complaining about rap or nu-metal albums, which are either poorly written, performed or in some cases, both. Strength In Numb333rs possesses neither of these problems, emanating a revitalized desire for change, both in a political and musical sense. We hear the sound of chanting, a crackly news bulletin blares out, reporting on ‘’a raucous yet focussed gathering, brought together to boistrestly demand change’’.

From this raucous prelude, we burst into BURN IT, where the sound of splicing synths creates tension, a juggernaut bass riff leads the charge, and the exchange between melodic hooks and passionate rapping proves a fiery combination! ‘I got a mind like Malcolm, and hands just like Ali, Black Panther, white mother, you best not try me’ Butler screams here, making sure no one questions Fever 333’s political principles. Animal shows the same sense of fierce defiance, its sporadic changes and glorious rising and falling, stimulating images of people coming together in solidarity, regardless of difference. The same praise could be paid to Prey For Me, which brings the melody to the forefront until a random chant of ‘you’re not the only one, who feels like the only one’ proves that true to their word, these musicians can disrupt normal service and continue to be enthralling. ONE OF The US and The Innocent are some of the most powerful anthems on the entire record, confronting inequality and segregation, with acerbic satire in the vein of ‘‘Another one in jail, another young black male, he kinda looks like me/ A law you did not make is gonna seal your fate.

Like you had no voice like you got no choice but we the remedy." Despite being more sombre and reserved, Inglewood is just as moving: "Centinela hospital where I was born to die, That is of course if it doesn’t get to gentrified" our frontman muses, wrenching at the listener's emotions as he describes in vivid detail, the ghettoized suburban lifestyle he was born into. These moments, among others, elevate this above a collection of protest songs and into a sincere and honest emotional experience. A striking feature of this debut full-length is that each subsequent listen feels more affecting, real and heartfelt. Fever 333 themselves are trying to do more than making a statement by donating a percentage of the revenue from their concerts – or demonstrations, as they refer to them – to local charities. Music has inspired and empowered them, Believe me, after your second, third or fourth listen to Strength In Numb333rs, you may feel the same way! 9/10

Puppy: The Goat (Spinefarm Records)

On a surface level, Puppy is your prototypical punk rock act, combining power chords with flagrant energy and fast-paced tempos. Look again though, and their wonderful knack for melody stands out. True, these songs are as sneering and ironic as the cover art – a lush pink, emblazoned with a skull – may suggest. Indeed, there has been significant hype surrounding The Goat from within what remains of the DIY punk community, Regardless, this London originating trio know their way just as well around a danceable jaunt as they do a mosh inspiring rocker! Black Hole confidentially opens proceedings. A sudden hit to the drums is immediately followed by a crunchy riff that is almost reminiscent of grunge-era griminess. Suddenly, a chorus emanating classic rock vibes gives birth to the realization of just how well Puppy bring together brashness with catchiness.

The same principle is continued onto the boisterous Vengeance - a song which certainly lives up to its title when it is assaulting your eardrums with ferocious distortion, yet not so much when it adopts a rock n roll swagger. Refusing to become generic, however, Poor Me throws a spanner in the works, changing the formula to resemble a stamping style of metal, proving different yet enthralling. Developing on the weird cross-section of styles we have seen so far, Just Like You poses the potential for metalheads punks, and pop fans come together in one giant circle pit of musical unity. The same could be said for the visceral And So I Burn, the retro feeling World Stands Still, or the raucous Bathe In Blood. Every song on this album plays a part in making up an experience which is both intriguing, and incredibly enjoyable.

True, the militant divisions between punk and rock fans disappeared a long time ago, with the birth of alternative and the spawning of several more subgenres, practically erasing sectarianism. Puppy reminds me of all my favorite alternative and power pop acts, yet copies none of them. Of all the bands I have discovered in my time writing for this blog, these will undoubtedly be one of those I continue to enjoy on a regular basis 8/10

Breathe Atlantis: Soulmade (Arising Empire)

Playing alternative with an enthusiastic sense of melody, and atmospheric touches, Soulmade certainly have a potential shot at the mainstream. I don’t mean that in a cynical way, not much anyway. These musicians just possess a slickly produced and arena-sized sound which utilizes emotional anthemic nature to its advantage. Soulmade is strong guitar driven yet also deceptively accessible. Take the opener, Supernova. A light patter of synths set the atmosphere before Schiesewitz Pop R&B inspired vocals to help to change the mood, leading up to a chorus which explodes in a flurry of soaring guitars and sharp quick drums. Without question, it displays a great use of dynamics, sets a mood, and sets my heart racing. Despite this, I can’t point to anything which intrigues me on a deeper level, nor are there any aspects of it I haven’t heard performed before.

Again, it’s rich, powerful and sounds excellent, yet not particularly immersive or deep. In fact, the reason I ruminate on the first song so deeply is that it sets a precedent for the entire album. Cold was one of the singles, and I can certainly describe it as a stadium anthem. The instrumentation is bright, the singing impressive, and it all ascends to a euphoric guitar solo in the closing moments. However, while it may grab me in the moment of listening, the overall beginning to end development fails to make me clamour for more. Fall is complete with chanting, reserved verses and larger than life choruses. For all those reasons I can see it be a staple at live concerts, but sadly not in my listening schedule. Spirit and I Think It Isn’t Fair, prove slower instants in the tracklist, and could be interpreted as heartfelt if it weren’t for a few overly generic tropes acting as a distraction.

On the other hand, as the names suggest, Savage and Addiction To The Worst are two of the more exciting, fast-paced songs, yet retain an overly Blasé, repetitive and entrenched feeling. Following on from that, I think it is fair to say that Soulmade lacking something vital. An essential quality if you will, which could make its emotionality worth caring about. Call it uniqueness, originality or integrity, I believe Breath Atlantis fails to live up to their potential here, yet certainly, have the musical chops to prove themselves in the future. It's by no means a bad effort, and I can see it being successful yet it is one which will leave many begging for something more thought-provoking 5/10

Bury The Traitor: Ascend To Clarity (Self Released)

In the complex puzzle of metal subgenres, Bury The Traitor fit firmly in the modern metal space, next to acts such as Parkway Drive, August Burns Red and of course, Killswitch Engage. Blast beats, breakdowns and melodic/screamed contrasts run throughout the six-track EP. In many ways, Ascend To Clarity is your typical metalcore release, standing up incredibly well from within the conventions of the genre, yet not exactly doing anything to win over those who may be less accustomed or friendly to the style. Embers/Season To Burn is the huge opening acts short metal release like this need. Admittedly, Bury The Traitor do a great job proving their conviction here, ‘And now we all will burn’ Loewenbech screams in his mangled as a spidery riff sets in, a persistent lead part sets up the blackened melodic themes, and the rhythm section does tier metallic duty of making the anthem pummelling.

Undoubtedly, Bury The Traitor excellently contrast harsh abrasiveness and carefully placed sensitivity, as evidenced by the single A.S.I.F, where the throttling verses, are juxtaposed with the ascendant choruses and solos. Heads Down, Thumbs Up and Lion Vs Wolf achieves contrast with yet more elegance, the harmonious and visceral sections seemingly dueling with each other in a competition of epicness. In the former the heavy side wins out, in the later, melodiousness dominates. I’m aware that I’m pointing strictly to standard metalcore practice here. Yet if Bury The Traitor's biggest crime is that they wear their cited influences on their sleeve, that’s commendable in my book.

No, it's not exactly ground-breaking, yet for an EP designed to set up a core sound, it achieves this passionately. Again, if you are not the biggest fan of the genre, Ascend To Clarity probably shouldn’t be your starting point. For those who are in that circle, or at least on the outskirts of it, you may just have found a new band to keep an eye out for in the future 6/10

Sunday, 27 January 2019

A View From The Back Of The Room: Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats

Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats and Blood Ceremony, The Globe, Cardiff

When I saw that two of the occult rock scene's biggest acts were going to be touring together in Cardiff, I dosed myself up to combat the man-flu and went down to The Globe on a cold Thursday night for a night of witchery and retroism, in the hope that the headliners didn't destroy an amp much like they did last time they came to the capital.

With only two acts playing it was a later start than usual but just as Canadian four piece Blood Ceremony (7) took to the stage The Globe was rammed, I'd guess almost sold out, although that could be due to the impromptu seating area that seemed to appear on the balcony. Fronted by the catsuited Alia O'Brien this band looked as if they stepped right off the set of a Dario Argento movie all beards and bare feet. Their songs pairs witchcraft with acid-induced paranoia driven by the head throbbing heaviness of Sean Kennedy, Lucas Gadke and Michael Carrillo who play analogue instruments with analogue amps as O'Brien has her work cut out for her with hammond organs, vocals and flute but moves between all of them effortlessly, playing tracks from their three albums including a new unreleased song, there was very little movement on stage mainly due to the organ but when every head is nodding very few would have noticed. A band I've wanted to see for a while now (mainly due to my love of the 1970's) Blood Ceremony were exactly what I expected the only major flaw was that I wish the vocals were higher in the mix as I struggled to hear them (maybe it was man-flu). An ideal opener for this evening of occult heaviness it got the room swaying like a black magic conjuring.

With a switchover complete Kevin Starrs' band of greasy longhairs made their way to the stage for the headline show of the paranoia inciting Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats (8) who drew mainly upon their most recent album Wasteland for the set of discordant, fuzz-driven doom that saw the riffs swirl as the backing screen displayed the blood red logo mixed with some 60's B-Movies and other assorted nasties on Mt. Abraxas which swished into Mind Crawler as they moved through the set the songs were down tuned retro Sabbath worshiping affairs with the occult ramped up to the full as the four members of the band locked in to colossal heavy grooves that saw the band moving through Death's Door, Shockwave City, Pusher Man and I'll Cut You Down to a wild crowd and ferocious headbanging. Uncle Acid are a primal force on stage very little chit chat between the songs meant it was almost a sermon of noise from the opening bars until the closing clatter, possibly the loudest gig in The Globe (except for THAT Dragonforce gig) it's music to dislodge a brain cells and the huddled masses left with a few less than they walked in with. Proto-metal evil at it's finest Uncle Acid are a dirty little thrill, best enjoyed with chemical help (in my case cold and flu), don't pass them by next time.

Saturday, 26 January 2019

Reviews: Darkwater, Antarticus, Omicida, Grande Fox

Darkwater: Human (Ulterium Records)

This has been a long time coming. Darkwater's first two albums were excellent chunks of melodic progressive metal. Where Stories End their previous album was released nine years ago so this one has had a long gestation period but one that has really paid dividends. Produced by the genius Jacob Hansen and delving "into a world of you and me, how we affect the world around us and the struggles we deal with as humans."

These lyrics are delivered embodied by the still stunning vocals of Henrik Båth who croons with soul as the band; Markus Sigfridsson (guitars), Simon Andersson (bass), Magnus Holmberg (keyboards) and Tobias Enbert (drums), play a cinematic style of metal such as Kamelot and Serenity, with a track like Reflection Of A Mind being full of drama as the pianos (Magnus Holmberg) lead along with the drums (Tobias Enbert) and guitars (Markus Sigfridsson & Simon Andersson, these layered compositions are really bolstered by the production of Jacob Hansen making this probably the best sounding Darkwater album ever. When progressive metal is done well it can really impress and Darkwater do it as good as any of the big boys. 8/10 

Antarticus: S/T (Green Needle Records)

Antarticus are a trio that hail from the Great White North (Whitehorse Yukon), their debut full length album is bookended by two simmering 80's synth reminiscent of synthwave, Crystal Caravan the intro builds like a Vangelis number. The rest of the album that sits in the middle is full of chunky stoner riffage as this three piece lock in for heavy grooves and jazz improvisations. To my critical ear Antarticus sound like a fusion of The Sword and Mastodon with songs such as Wöld War having a Sabbath-like swagger that grows, like many of their songs, into cascading guitar solos. Holding down the rhythm are Dustin Parsons (drums) and Mack Smith, who not only plays bass, but also sings and gives the synths, while Addam Parsons has some exploratory guitar playing mainly on the psychedelic Cosmic Exile. As Stoneburner's electronics fade into memory like a replicant in the rain, Antarticus is a very strong debut release from these Yukon natives. 7/10

Omicida: Defrauded Reign (Self Released)

I've talked about White Wizzard before, mainly about how the sum of it's parts are actually better than the whole. Omicida is yet another band featuring members of that band (most of whom are now in Monument), their debut EP hinted at a much nastier direction than Monument and Holy Grail (the most well known post WW bands) and on this full length they have really become a tenacious, take no prisoners thrash act. They have changed their line up since then with only drummer Giovanni Durst (WW & Monument) remaining as the rest of the band are fleshed out by vocalist Giovanni Barbieri, guitarists Will Wallner (Will Wallner/Vivian Vain, ex-White Wizzard), Dan Baune (Monument) and bassist Daniel Bate (Benediction, Monument, ex -Absolva).

This is the line up that has this album snarling from the very beginning and I will tell you something if you're already missing Slayer then I'd pick up Defrauded Reign as it's the nearest your going to get, double kicks and down-tuned thrash riffs are met by explosive lead bursts and Barbieri's Araya screams, the subject matter too is akin to Hanneman/King lyrics with tales of horror, murder and politics especially Violent Resolution, Burn The Cross and The Supremacist which explode out of the speakers like they could have come off South Of Heaven (a riff nicked on Unborn) while elsewhere Protect And Serve and State Of Terror have a heavy Testament stomp to them. Full thrash fury from start to finish absolutely intense, dry those tears a new reign has begun. 8/10    

Grande Fox: Space Nest (Self Released)

Characterised as space psychedelic stoner heavy rock Thessaloniki act Grande Fox play fuzzy heavy riff rock that Greeks love, don't expect a lot of melody, this is about riffs, thick sludgy riffs in fact and from a band that cite Karma To Burn as an influence it's easy to see why these songs are so discordant with some grizzled vocals over top of distorted riffs that are only matched in their aural power by the mind twisting psych elements, Burned Beard is the best example of this having the space rock force of Hawkwind. At the moment the band are a three piece of Lefteris Zaoskoufis (guitar), Nick Berzamanis (vocals) and Vasilis Theodosiades (guitar) with a session drummer and bassist who must be as mad as the rest of the band to really make sure this album fucks with your mind as much as possible, if QOTSA and Neurosis float your boat then Grande Fox the grab a handful of quaaludes and phase out. 7/10   

Friday, 25 January 2019

A View From The Back Of The Room: Powerwolf (Review By Stief)

Powerwolf, Amaranthe & Kissin Dynamite, SWX, Bristol

Not long after entering the SWX - a great venue for this sort of gig - we were greeted by the sounds of AC/DC’s Kissin’ Dynamite, before Kissin’ Dynamite (7) themselves blast onto stage. This is their first tour on British soil, but they seem made for this crowd, some of which are evidently steadfast fans. With songs such as I’ve Got The Fire, Sex Is War and I Will Be King (during which vocalist Hannes Braun donned a Mercury-esque regal cloak), it’s clear the band love what they do. Guitarists Ande Braun and Jim Muller pulled out all the stops, harmonising, riffing, solos galore with Steffen Hailer and Andi Schnitzer working double time on bass and drums respectively. The band definitely have the sound to fill a venue like this, along with the attitude to fill an arena.

A brief break, and Amaranthe (5) take the stage. Having kind of caught them at Bloodstock Open Air last year, where they were plagued with sound problems, leaving them with only half their set, I was looking forward to seeing the proper thing. With the band starting off with Maximise, the setlist was a good mix of old and new, the band’s debut album and latest albums dominating the set, with a few fan favourites such as Digital World and Drop Dead Cynical pumping the crowd up with the Amaranthe brand mix of melodic metal, industrial beats and clean, harsh and symphonic vocals. However, after Drop Dead Cynical, the majority of the band left the stage, leaving bassist Johan Andreassen to perform an impromptu comedy set to fill the time. Now, a similar thing happened during the aforementioned technical difficulties at Bloodstock, and at that point, it served a purpose. However, tonight in Bristol, I wasn’t sure why it had to happened at all, with Johan swearing at the crowd, sticking his finger through his fly and attempting a viking clap, the only purpose it seemed to serve any momentum the band had built up, and the last two songs unfortunately felt like a struggle to regain any of that.

Thankfully, Powerwolf (9) were on top form. Having first caught Powerwolf at BOA on the Sophie Lancaster stage nearly a decade ago, it’s been brilliant to see the band go from strength to strength. While at their core, they’re still the humble, wacky band that stood on that stage in 2010, it’s clear they’re now very comfortable with the clear adoration the crowd give them. With this being the Sacrament Of Sin tour, it’s no surprise the majority of songs tonight were from the album of the same name, with Demons Are A Girl's Best Friend, Fire And Forgive, and Incense And Iron dominating the opening minutes of the set. Attila Dorn seems born to play the role of frontman, using whatever gaps he can to whip the crowd up, often dragging the classic band tactic of ‘I’m not sure that was loud enough’ out a bit too long.

The Greywolf brothers both work brilliantly, the guitars weaving in and out of each other, Matthew’s solos and riffage tight. Drummer Roel Van Helden also seems built for the band, blasting out salvos of machine gun drumming. However, props have to be given to keyboardist Falk Maria Schlegel, who not only provides the church like atmosphere with his keys, but seems to act as the band’s hype man whenever he’s not playing, running back and forth across the stage, pumping his fist and whipping up the crowd into a frenzy. Highlights of the night included Stossgebet from the latest album as well as classics Amen And Attack, We Drink Your Blood and personal favourite, Resurrection By Erection, a perfect example of how a band with a great sound can still be goofy as fuck. If tonight was anything to go by, Powerwolf’s main stage slot at BOA will guarantee smiles all round.

Reviews: At The Gates, Toby Hitchcock, Starbreaker, Delfinia (Reviews By Paul H & Matt)

At The Gates: With The Pantheons Blind (Century Media) [Paul H]

In support of their European tour with Behemoth and Wolves In The Throne Room, ATG has released a special digital EP. What you get are six tracks from 2018’s excellent To Drink From The Night Itself, but with Rob Miller (Ambiex, Tau Cross) adding guest vocals (The Mirror and Daggers Of Black). Opening with Daggers Of Black Haze, this EP is a reminder of just how good ATG are. Raped By The Light Of Christ, The Chasm and The Mirror are all superb slabs of melodic death metal which Rich covered in his review back in May 2018. Full of jagged riffs and Tomas Linberg’s trademark gruff vocals, this is an appetizer to what promises to be one of the gigs of the year. 7/10

Toby Hitchcock: Reckoning (Frontiers Records) [Paul H]

2019 promises an onslaught of melodic hard rock as the Frontiers label goes from strength to strength. Toby Hitchcock is the lead singer of Pride Of Lions, handpicked by Jim Peterik, founder member of AOR giants Survivor, way back in 2003. Joining Hitchcock on this solo release are Daniel Flores - all keyboards and drums, Michael Palace - guitars and bass and Yngve "Vinnie" Strömberg - drums and percussion. Hitchcock has a soaring, powerful voice, in the style of Bobby Kimball, Jimi Jamison or Lou Gramm and Reckoning is the perfect showcase for him. With Pride Of Lions currently on hiatus, Hitchcock has taken the opportunity to deliver 51 minutes of polished, AOR which will appeal to fans of Survivor, Toto and Foreigner.

As you would expect, it is drenched in thick keyboard sounds, and the lyrical content focuses on relationships and expressions of love so beloved of the genre. It takes a mere two songs before we arrive at Show Me How To Live, the typical ballad which is sickly in its sweetness. Behind The Lies is reminiscent of Mr Mister, with bombastic keyboard riffs dominating. Melodic rock is not my genre of choice, the lightweight pomp and ghastly lyrics rarely appeal whilst the multiple harmonies that drench the choruses do little. However, in terms of quality, Hitchcock has a voice that is amongst the best in this field, smoother than Rob Halford’s head. Reckoning is stuffed full of similar songs, some impressive musicianship and follows a traditional path but in the world of melodic rock, this is one of the better offerings. 7/10

Starbreaker: Dysphoria (Frontiers Records) [Paul H]

Another Frontiers release and album number three for Starbreaker, the collaboration between former TNT frontman, Tony Harnell and Primal Fear and Allen/Lande guitarist Magnus Karlsson. Starbreaker started as Harnell's side project while he was still in TNT but although this was initially a solo project, it soon morphed into Starbreaker with Karlsson, former TNT drummer John Macaluso, and bassist Fabrizio Grossi. The band recorded its first self-titled studio album in 2005 with the sophomore Love’s Dying Wish released in 2008 featuring new bassist Jonni Lightfoot. It’s been 11 years since that second album but with Harnell no longer in TNT, the time for Dysphoria has come.

Joined by new drummer Anders Köllerfors, this is another solid melodic rock release with the occasional jagged riff giving the album a bit more grit. Dominated by Harnell's strong vocals, the content follows a familiar pattern; Tracks such as How Many More Goodbyes, Beautiful One and My Heart Belongs To You should be all the clues you need to confirm that there are no lyrics about rotting meat, chopping off heads or grinding genitalia on this release. A respectable cover of the Judas Priest song Starbreaker from 1977’s Sin After Sin closes this release, Harnell showing the appropriate level of reverence in his singing, wisely avoiding the Halford scream at the end of the song and Karlsson capturing the solo work perfectly. 6/10

Delfinia: Deep Elevation (Self Released) [Matt]

Sometimes you need a bit of power metal, all the intelligent metal in the world can sometimes be surpassed by galloping riffs and a wall of synths so along comes, especially when one opens with a intro that reminds me of Terminator with a plaintive piano. Delfinia is a project from vocalist/sound producer Konstantin Laars Naumenko and singer/keyboard player Daria Naumenko who along with a number of musicians such as Olaf Thorsen (Labyrinth, Vision Divine), Aldo Lonobile (Secret Sphere), Ross VC Thompson (Van Canto), Jocke 'Aerendir' Johansson (Twilight Force), Krzysztof Gunsen Elzanowski (Pathfinder) and most famously Roland Grapow (Masterplan, ex-Helloween).

The majority of the instruments are played by Konstantin with numerous session musicians adding bass, guitars and solos, vocally he's also very strong sounding a little like Tony Kakko of Sonata Arctica fame, something that you can also hear in the music itself, the synths pulsate, the riffs bounce along leading to soaring melodic solos, it's standard power metal by the numbers, simple, dumb and after a while a bit dull, still for power metal purists this will satisfy. 6/10

Thursday, 24 January 2019

A View From The Back Of The Room: Help For Heroes 5 (Review By Paul H & Matt)

Help For Heroes Chapter 5, Fuel Rock Club, Cardiff

Now in its fifth edition, there was no better way to banish the winter blues than a hard rock all dayer at Cardiff’s main rock and metal hub. As it happened, this gig coincided with the march to Guildford Crescent, the latest show of opposition to the Rapport family’s decision to close the Independent Music Venue Gwdihw and the two restaurants next door, The Thai House and The Madeira. The show of feeling was impressive, and the numbers that turned out on a cold, damp afternoon were far larger than the march to save Womanby Street a couple of years ago. Having joined the march, and then stopped at the excellent Beelzebub’s for a cheeky pint, it was off to Fuel.

Opening the event was Foreigner’s Son (6), a three piece who were apparently playing their first ever gig. It didn’t show and although the band played a set mainly consisting of covers, they were comfortable and competent throughout. A couple of Thin Lizzy songs are never going to disappoint me unless they are badly performed, but Sam Hermanis possesses a soulful voice which captured the spirit of Lynott perfectly. Regulars at Fuel would have recognised guitarist Jack Davies from behind the bar but this time it was his playing that was welcomed rather than his pint pouring skills. Some sweet solos were probably the highlight of their set but there is plenty of potential for this band and their hard rock has a captive audience in South Wales, an area which loves the classic rock feel.

With Fuel already swelling to decent numbers, next up was Dark Valley (6), another three-piece from South Wales whose range of classic rock went down well with the assembled crowd. The band comprises Jamie Little on vocals and guitar, Marcel Mertens on drums and Dafydd Robbin-Hill on bass. They powered through their set and whilst it was a little generic, their compositions were interesting and well played.

Elliot Cadmore is a well-known face to most regulars in South Wales and his one-man project Sounds Of Insane Music (6) soon garnered a few new fans. Whilst the extreme progressive metal that Elliot plays was a little out of kilter with most of the bands on display, there can be no doubting the man’s talent and his set flew by. Having been plying his trade since 2011, his dedication and perseverance is impressive. Insuna (6), a melodic metal outfit from Cardiff. Led by the powerful vocals of A.K, the band introduced some new riffage to proceedings and received a healthy response from the ever-growing crowd. The band has shared the stage with some bigger names including Leaves Eyes and Triaxis, and their brand of metal was certainly watchable.

Female trio Firebrand (6) have been around for several years and in guitarist/vocalist B.J. they possess a striking frontwoman who can play a mean guitar and sing with power. Supported by Sarah and Chelsea, the girls proved once more that the ladies can match anything the lads can do and by the end of their set there were a lot of grinning faces around the venue.

And so we headed to the final two. Organiser Julian Birch had lost two bands in the run up to the event but that didn’t bother anyone, and we wish those who had to pull out all the best. [Matt] First up was Ill Fate (7) featuring a former member of Triaxis on the six strings, the Cardiff based punk powered trio, created a bouncing atmosphere, with some snot nosed abrasive punk but a pop vein sneaking in, a nice change of pace in the set shying away from the brazen rock of the majority of the

That left us with Haxan (7), the three-piece which comprises sisters Sam and Charlotte Bolderson, (Vox/guitar and drums) and bassist Harriet Wadeson on bass. On a day of trios, the three ladies brought the power and the grit to demonstrate who they were worthy headliners. A packed room roared their approval as the band crushed all with their classic rock style. Plenty of riffs, hooks and melody which showed their influences and a fine end to a decent day.

Full marks to Julian, whose heroic efforts in setting up the whole event were well rewarded with £720 raised for the charity. A staggering turnout during the day, and to all who generously donated their time, a huge well done.

Wednesday, 23 January 2019

Reviews: Mono, The Mound Builders, Papa Roach, Static Tension (Paul S & Alex)

Mono: Nowhere Now Here (Temporary Residence Limited) [Paul S]

Mono are celebrating their 20th anniversary this year, and are celebrating by releasing their 10th album. The band have made their first ever lineup change recently, recruiting a new drummer in Duhm Majuri Cipolla. There is also a track featuring Takaki on vocals for the first time. The track, Breath, is the only song on the album to feature vocals. All the other tracks are instrumentals, most of which feature many, many instruments, the album also contains electronic elements for the first time. The album has some very quiet moments and some very loud moments, clearly relating to Mono’s traditional theme of darkness and light.

First track God Bless is an intro to the album, the track takes quite a while to fade up, when it does it is simple swells of Brass instruments (these could be real Brass, or electronic elements, lets just say, they sound like brass). Second track After You Comes The Flood starts with a very simple guitar lick, which slowly builds, before it becomes a big riff, without changing the tune from the lick. The riff continues for the rest of the track. Sounds boring? Well it isn’t, it’s amazing. The riff might not change, but the way the riff is played, and the mix of instruments that play it, constantly mutate. The track gets bigger and bigger as it goes along, a guitar solo is added, and that riff just won’t leave your head, man this is huge, and beautiful.

Next we have Breath. The only track to have vocals, Breath is sung by Takaki in a very, well, breathy way. Her voice is quiet, and hesitant, the track feel delicate and fragile, as if it could shatter at any moment. Takaki’s voice is a little like Bjork’s when she is being really quiet (definitely not Bjork when she is being noisy!). In the second half of the track a guitar riff comes in, with some delicate tremolo picking, before it gently fades out. Nowhere Now Here has a very slow, quiet build up of guitar and brass, before a drum fill signals the arrival of a huge riff, this then builds with strings, getting bigger and bigger until it all abruptly stops for a short interlude. After this rest the song comes crashing back in, but even huger this time. The guitar riff is now tremolo picked, and this helps boost the dynamics of the track to a huge, dramatic ending. Far And Further starts with a quiet, constantly repeated guitar lick which is very reminiscent of Philip Glass, for at least the first half of the song, before this starts to get louder. The song, although having the quiet start/loud finish, has such a relaxed, and dreamlike quality to it, it becomes beautiful and cathartic.

Next up is Sorrow, which starts with a slow gentle riff, before the track goes into a beautiful tremolo picked guitar riff, which I think has the a tune which is very similar to the song Can’t Smile Without You (recorded by Barry Manilow, and The Carpenters), I realise that might sound a little strange, but that is what it sounds like to me. The track builds, but always has a dreamlike, ethereal feeling to it, even at the very end where there is distortion on the guitar. The track ends with electronic elements drifting off into silence. Parting is very simple. String swells, with a piano playing over the top. Achingly beautiful. Meet Us Where The Night Ends again builds slowly, till a mid-paced riff arrives. The song is maybe a little more direct than some of the other material on the album, there are less instruments in the mix, and the drumming is more purposeful. Funeral Song is a short interlude made up of brass and strings.

It’s simple and charming, and takes us into the last track Vanishing. The song has an uplifting quality to it, as if the turmoil of the rest of the album has come to a resolution, and it has a blissed out, contented feel to it. It’s a suitable ending to a fantastic album.Nowhere Now Here is a stunning piece of work. It’s beautiful, dreamlike, ethereal, subtle, delicate, huge, noisy, quiet, gossamery and exquisite. This is a beautiful piece of art, every note has meaning and relevance, it gets into your head, and is very affecting. You have to be patient with this album, give it time to grow on you and you will discover something truly amazing. 9/10

The Mound Builders: The Mound Builders (Failure Records & Tapes) [Paul S]

The Mound Builders hail from Indiana, this self titled album is the bands second, seven years after their debut Strangers In A Strange Land. The style of metal served up on The Mound Builders is a mix of doom, sludge and hardcore, there is a similarity in sound with British bands Allfather and Mastiff; whether they are slow or fast, they are always heavy. First track Torchbearer kicks the album off in a great way, definitely one of the highlights of the album. The song has a slow, but powerful beginning, before a cracking up-tempo riff blasts in and we are in huge and bouncy, punky hardcore territory. Hair Of The Dogma has a massive intro, before morphing into a more driving and aggressive hardcore part. The song has a relentless quality that I really enjoy. Third track Separated From Youth has a slower, more measured feel to it. The riffs are a little less aggressive, maybe with a little bit of a stoner vibe to it. Acid Slugs starts slow, really slow, and is massively heavy, with a little bit of an Eyehategod feel to it. Then the track kicks off into a hugely nasty piece of hardcore, with a punky flavour, you could shout Oi Oi Oi during this track without anyone batting an eyelid.

Next up we have the fastest track, and my favourite song on this album; Star City Massacre. Star City Massacre is an absolute blast of hardcorey thrash, so much fun, head banging is mandatory with this song! Regolith has a looser, stonier feel to it, the tempo (possibly a 6:8) is relaxed and lazy, which works well after the speed and fury of Star City Massacre. Broken Pillars brings back the sickeningly heavy and slow again. The song pounds the listener into the ground in a delightfully nasty way. Final track Vanished Frontier is a pounding, unremitting mid-paced song that has a unstoppable feel to it, seriously, don’t stand in front of this track, it will run you down! It’s a great way to end a really enjoyable album. The Mound Builders is a great album (and band!), it has a lot of variation, but still feel like a coherent whole. The songs have depth to them, and feel like there has been a lot of work and care gone into writing and recording them. Highly recommended. 8/10

Papa Roach: Who Do You Trust? (Eleven Seven Music) [Alex]

Those of you who read my end of year lists in 2018, will know that my lack of hope in mainstream rock to produce anything substitutive, is thankfully ignorable due to the diverseness of the genre. Papa Roach is, of course, a charting act of the Nu-metal era. Characterized almost entirely by the ‘Cut My Life Into Pieces’ meme, their brand of angst has not exactly held up gracefully. Yet give them this, their later years have seen them at least trying to mature and adapt. However, they always lacked the creativity, and Who Do You Trust? Is yet another example of them straddling the line between guarding that acerbic Papa Roach attitude, and desperately trying to stay relevant.

Take one of the singles, Elevate. Attitude-ridden rapping pervades and a spike of lead guitars on the chorus tries and fails to lend some edge, all while a meandering beat, trap synths, and millennial whoops make this the pastiche of those charting acts, mislabeled as ‘rock’. Then there's Not The Only One, a song dictated by a semi-tropical acoustic guitar part which feels placated from a stock of generic riffs. Perhaps the most noticeable thing here is Shaddix’s signature ‘’I was screwed up/ I was angry at the world/ I was a loser’’ lyricism, showing up in an anthem apparently penned to inspire hopeful defiance in the youth!

Speaking of the defiance theme let's discuss Renegade Music. Does that sound like a Rage Against The Machine title? Well it should, because in trying to cash in on the idea of political anger, Papa Roach appropriates a number of rebellious lyrics, displaying none of the insight which would be required to drive a compliment anywhere beyond a backhanded: ‘really sticking it to da’ man there I see, how is the trend-chasing going?’ Finally, we come to the title track. To be fair, Who Do You Trust? has a level of stomp and power to at least keep you hooked for the duration, yet is nothing to get excited about or sell you on the album as a whole. In this particular case, they released the heaviest track as the first single for calculated and clever reasons.

Overall, Who Do You Trust? will likely not just be forgotten and shrugged off by cynics who never cared for Papa Roach in the first place, but by fans who feel let down. While it is very easy to point and laugh at a song like Last Resort, the small age group of people who got into music by watching Kerrang will be all too familiar with Papa Roach, and may even defend them for the dirty, angst-ridden appeal which they undeniably possess. Forgive me those of you who can identify with the new material, but it is hard to see how anyone will defend the 2019 incarnation of Papa Roach, 20 years from now. 2/10

Static Tension: Ashes To Animation (Buried By Sky Records) [Alex]

Calling themselves progressive grunge rock, Static Tension certainly embraces a wide variety of influences: A facet which displays itself across their first full-length album, harnessing the rawness of Nirvana, the weirdness of Tool, and just a touch of the disquiet capitalized on by elements of the industrial metal movement. Ashes To Animation certainly has the hallmarks of a debut, the production quality being decidedly dirty, definitely championing the unfiltered nature of grunge in that respect. Yet I would be a fool to ignore the experimentation and shifting dynamics imbuing this release and showing limitless promise for the future of this Ohio quartet.

Kindling begins the album on a discomforting dirge, the resonant acoustics, and the hypnotic vocals already enticing the listener with candid curiosity. Bury My Body then rips you out of the elusive state, with a trudging yet driving riff, steering towards an epic progressive crescendo. No Return is equally as dark, the stonerific, sabbath-esque riffing creatic one atmosphere, contrasted with the mellow ambiance of the chorus. We never stand still for long, as we hear solos reminiscent of classic rock, vocal passages inspired by alternative, and guitar parts with the crunch and distortion of underground metal.

One of the most unique parts across this entire experience is the morose mellowness of In Spite, which despite remaining relaxed for most of its run length hooks us in with the macabre nature of the imagery and the intense, burning feeling which swells, in the steady climb towards the final few moments. Not that Static Tension needs to rely on huge payoffs. The following piece Absence is composed entirely of gentle guitar musings, proving simple yet effective. Got To Give takes advantage of the unpredictability which pervades the debut, staying unsettling as it sways from seconds of nuance and introspection to anger and zeal, without feeling unnecessarily jarring or alienating.

Serpentine dials the prog up a notch, a wildling and precisely plucked guitar part proving how skill, as well as emotion, factors into the musicians ambitious genre fusions. In condrum with progressive stylings, the anthem is ever shifting, later developing into a throttling gallop, reaching spectacular heights with a euphoric lead solo, all before gracefully spiralling back into its original form. By contrast, Blank Silhouette pays homage to the stripped down melancholy of grunge, paying homage to the father's of the Seattle sound. The two tracks alone demonstrate the promise held by Static Tension as an act who can bring together two contrasting genres into reconciliation, under one name.

Like I hinted earlier, this is not a flawless debut. In some respects it can be seen as very amateure. Yet aside from establishing a core idea, it makes an effort to experiment, play with dynamics, and subvert typical genre conventions. The end result is an incredibly dark, yet intriguing record, which leaves your ability to predict the sound of future albums narrow, and the possibilities wide ranging and diverse! 7/10

Tuesday, 22 January 2019

Reviews: Inglorious, The Riven, Hell Fire, Hellnite (Paul H & Matt)

Inglorious: Ride To Nowhere (Frontiers Records) [Paul H]

Let’s face it, Nathan James hasn’t covered himself in glory in recent times. His outburst against former band members, fuelled by his every swelling ego backfired and made him look an absolute tool. With three of the five members having left in 2018, leaving just James and drummer Phil Beaver. Well, regardless of his inability to keep his gob in check, album number 3 with Inglorious MK II is a decent piece of hard rock. It’s full of catchy, well-paced hard rock, and as usual, James’ steals the show with his phenomenal vocals. I dislike him as a person, wasn’t impressed by the band live at Steelhouse a few years ago but there is no denying his voice is amongst the most distinctive and powerful in the hard rock.

The opening duo of Where Are You Now and Freak Show have steel before the medium paced Alter Bridge style Never Alone allows the band to show a more measured and stylish approach. Recorded with old line up Andreas Z Eriksson (now left) handles the lead duties with ease, whilst rhythm guitarist Drew Lowe (now left) and bassist Colin Parkinson (now left) nail down the engine room alongside drummer Phil Beaver (still remains). Sure, at times Ride To Nowhere is a bit classic rock by numbers, with tracks such as Time To Go and the title track leaving little impression; the acoustic closing number Glory Days is a weak finish and I prefer it when the band are rocking out. This album is likely to be lapped up by those who enjoy their rock unchallenging and it won’t change my opinion one jot. I can, however, appreciate that James has one hell of a voice. 7/10

The Riven: S/T (The Sign Records) [Matt]

Debut album from heavy blues band The Riven. Born from the same streets as The Who and The Rolling Stones this is a band that skillfully mix classic blues riffs with desert rock, proggy textures, traditional metal bite, the PR calls the four members musical vagabonds and from the grooves here you'd have to agree taking their sounds from Grand Funk Railroad, Thin Lizzy along with contemporaries like The Blues Pills and No Sinner this is soulful proper rock n roll played without boundaries. If they want some throbbing rhythms and drum fills with psychedelic leanings then they will on Fortune Teller, if they want some proper blues they'll play it on Sweet Child, if they want prog then Far Beyond takes it to the realm of the wizard.

They moved from London to Sweden and you can here that Swedish retroism running through this record it screams of loon pants and paisley shirts, the kind of music made for letting it all hang loose on a Friday night. Musically tight as a gymnasts outfit the holy trinity of guitarist Arnau Diaz, bass player Max Ternebring and drummer Olof Axegärd explore with their instruments giving this album it's eclectic grooves as hell soundscapes while singer Totta Ekebergh has one of those voices with more grit than a John Wayne western, she can croon on I Remember but really let's rip on The Serpent and Leap Of Faith. London's loss is Sweden's gain as only good things can come from immersing yourself in that stew pot of Scandinavian creativity, expect big things from The Riven as this debut is a proper rock record! 9/10

Hell Fire: Mania (RidingEasy Records) [Paul H]

Firmly cocooned within the Bay Area thrash scene, and most notably the 1980s, San Francisco quartet Hell Fire are unashamedly focused on the old school thrash combined with the histrionics of NWOBHM. The band developed when bassist Herman Bandala moved to San Francisco from Tijuana in Mexico and caught the attention of guitarist Tony Campos. With drummer Mike Smith and vocalist/guitarist Jake Nunn completing the line-up. Mania is the band’s third album and it is fast paced with intense drumming, high pitched squeals, galloping guitar picks and soaring harmonies that punch you in the face. Jake Nunn’s vocals are an acquired taste and personally I see them as the weak link.

Whilst the opening track Warpath contains enough grit to power through, the title track which follows exposes the limitations. Otherwise, there is plenty to enjoy here with tracks reminiscent of the days of Angel Witch, Iron Maiden circa 1980 as well as Exodus and Riot and even early ‘Tallica. There are blistering rhythms a plenty, melody and driving hard heavy metal which varies from thrash to more routine metal, with the duel guitar work throughout mirroring early Maiden, especially on Transcending Evil and the closing double of Knights Of The Holy and Masochist. This isn’t going to pull up any trees but it’s enjoyable enough. 6/10

Hellnite: Midnight Terrors (Sliptrick Records) [Paul H]

Opening with a mellow introduction it’s pleasing to report that Hellnite’s debut release then explodes like an oil tanker in a Vin Diesel movie. Solid if uninspiring thrash metal with hell of a story behind it. Born in Mexico and now operating out of Edmonton, Canada, Hellnite released one EP, Manipulator before dissolving. With vocalist and guitarist Paolo Belmar relocating to Canada, he set about sourcing a live band.

With that now a reality, Midnight Terrors arrives as the sole work of Belmar who plays all the instruments. You must admire the drive and determination of Belmar, who has kept his dream alive. Influenced by Death, Kreator and Slayer amongst others, this isn’t groundbreaking by a long stretch, but it is competently delivered, the songs are formulaic and routine but bristling with energy and enthusiasm. 6/10

Reviews: Carnal Forge, Dark Mirror Ov Tragedy, Desert Fear, Jinjer (Reviews By Paul H)

Carnal Forge: Gun To Mouth Salvation (ViciSolum Productions)

Now this is more like it; the welcome return of one of Sweden’s most impressive thrash outfits some 12 years since 2007’s Testify For My Victims. Founder member Jari Kuusisto quit the band “because I was just fed up with the music industry and everything about being in the band.” Luckily for those who like their thrash with a good dose of death metal style, the band emerged from hibernation in 2013 and finally Carnal Forge are back. Having released seven studio albums since their formation in 1997, there is quite a history to the band who are one of several outfits named after Carcass songs. With almost as many personnel changes as any team managed by Claudio Ranieri, the current formation is led by original founder Jari Kuusisto on rhythm guitar, new vocalist Tommie Wahlberg, long suffering Lars Lindén (bass) and Petri Kuusisto (lead guitar) completed with Lawrence Dinamarca on drums.

Gun To Mouth Salvation leans heavily on the groove of Lamb Of God and the roasting ferocity of At The Gates, a raw combination that works far better than it might. With Dimmu Borgir style harmonies on the backing vocals on the opening Parasites and Reforged, there is plenty to explore. It’s bone shatteringly heavy, with Wahlberg’s guttural roar enough to break paving slabs, the heaving riffs crunch with an intensity usually reserved for the finest peanut butter and as for the speed; let's just say there is some insane drumming and explosive acceleration. King Chaos and Endless War are both explosive, all power and drive combining with some blisteringly vicious guitar work. This album kicks, it punches and above all it pulls the listener close and threatens nasty things to kittens in your ear. Listen to it at all costs. Otherwise it’ll be your fault. 8/10

Dark Mirror Ov Tragedy: The Lord Ov Shadows (Sliptrick Records)

The Dark Mirror Of Tragedy was the mirror in which Nostradamus saw the dark cruel future. An apt name for a black metal band who hail from South Korea. With lyrical themes of suicide and death, their symphonic sound is all enveloping, reaching far from the abyss with tentacles of despair that wrap around the listener in a magical but sinister manner. Formed in Seoul in 2003, this is the band’s fourth full length release and it’s a pretty impressive aural assault. Sweeping symphonics vie for space amidst the thunderous blast beats, huge riffs and soaring keyboards.

The opening two tracks pale into insignificance when you hit Chapter III: The Annunciation In Lust. At over 13 minutes in length it’s a brooding hulk of a song but it is merely a warm up to the massive lurking beast that is Chapter V: I Am The Lord Ov Shadows which brings this five track release to an astonishing crescendo at just shy of 21 minutes. With Material Pneuma handling the raging vocals, the other five members of the band cope comfortably with the intricate time changes and ferocious increases of pace and power. At times haunting and ethereal, at others as blunt as a builder’s hammer, The Lord Ov Shadows seems to be as good a place as any to get to know a band that had been a mystery to me prior to this release. 7/10

Desert Fear: Drowned By Humanity (Century Media Records)

Formed in 2007, Deserted Fear spent the first three years preparing and reconfiguring. The core of the band— Manuel ‘Mahne’ Glatter (vocals; guitars), Fabian Hildebrandt (guitars), Simon Mengs (drums) then released Demo 2010.  Two years later, with F.D.A records having offered them a deal, death metal legend Dan Swanö helped produce the band’s debut album, My Empire. With Swanö at the helm once more for follow-up album, 2014’s Kingdom Of Worms the band began to create interest across Europe. In 2016 Century Media Records offered Deserted Fear a new multi album deal and in 2017 the band delivered album number three, Dead Shores Rising. That brings us up to date and to album number four, Drowned By Humanity.

Produced by Henrik Udd (At The Gates, Miasmal) at Studio Fredman, Drowned By Humanity is indeed a hefty chunk of thrash and death metal. However, to class it as sitting at the “very top of the Germany—no, European!—death metal heap”, as pronounced by their press release is complete bollocks. It’s solid, it’s brutal, and tracks such as All Will Fall, An Everlasting Dawn, and A Breathing Soul are ferocious death metal. But, and it’s a massive but, there is little here which suggests that Deserted Fear can really stand out from the herd. Violent aggression may be the essence of this release, Glatter’s broken glass growl fits perfectly, whilst the melody and groove which underpins Sins From The Past and Scars Of Wisdom adds to the listening pleasure but I’m not convinced that this promotes the band into the arena of the behemoths of the European death metal scene. Plenty of promise, and some meaty portions to get your teeth into but still some way to go before the summit can be attempted, let alone conquered.  6/10

Jinjer: Micro EP (Napalm Records)

I’ve got to be honest, the Jinjer juggernaut has passed me by in recent years. Massively touted by those who run Amplified Festival, to the extent that they are top of the bill this year, there is clearly something that people see in the Ukrainian outfit. Personally, I’m not so sure. It’s certainly different from some of the more run of the mill stuff out there now, and their intense mix of progressive hard rock, death metal and metalcore will surely attract an audience. The irregular changes between clean and growling vocals of singer Taitana Shmailyuk which sounds like a hybrid of Angela Gossow and Christina Scabbia on most tracks but especially Dreadful Moments are confusing and chaotic.

I struggled with the nu-metal Teacher, Teacher! with its constant changes of direction and style and overall this must be one of those bands I’m always going to stand there and say, “I just don’t get it”. If you like muddled and inconsistent metalcore merged with the arse end of Arch Enemy then you may well dig this but it’s all a bit meh to me. 5/10