You pretty much know what you’re getting with August Burns Red at this point. This is their tenth album, and they aren't trying to reinvent the wheel. Honestly, they shouldn't. If it isn't broke, don't fix it.
This record delivers exactly what we've come to expect over the last two decades: massive breakdowns, complex guitar leads, and a lot of energy. For a band that has been doing this for so long, the consistency is actually pretty impressive.
Opening with Legions, featuring Mike Hranica from The Devil Wears Prada, the album starts with a lot of momentum. It’s heavy, fast, and has that classic mid-2000s metalcore feel. Jake Luhrs' vocals are front and centre, sounding as powerful as ever.
Opening with Legions, featuring Mike Hranica from The Devil Wears Prada, the album starts with a lot of momentum. It’s heavy, fast, and has that classic mid-2000s metalcore feel. Jake Luhrs' vocals are front and centre, sounding as powerful as ever.
It’s followed by The Nameless and Behemoth, which keep the pace moving without giving you much time to catch your breath. JB Brubaker’s lead guitar work on Behemoth is particularly sharp, showing that they can still write technical parts that don't feel like they're just showing off.
One thing I really liked on this release was the guest features. Jamie Hails from Polaris shows up on Sonic Salvation, adding some great contrast to the vocal delivery. Later on, Make Them Suffer bring a different flavour to Cerebral Malfunction.
One thing I really liked on this release was the guest features. Jamie Hails from Polaris shows up on Sonic Salvation, adding some great contrast to the vocal delivery. Later on, Make Them Suffer bring a different flavour to Cerebral Malfunction.
It’s a good way to shake things up on a ten-album-deep discography without losing the core identity of the band. It keeps the middle of the album from feeling like a repeat of what came before.
Even the shorter moments work well here. Tear Of The Clouds is a brief, atmospheric breather that clocks in at under a minute, but it sets up Whispers Like Splinters perfectly.
Even the shorter moments work well here. Tear Of The Clouds is a brief, atmospheric breather that clocks in at under a minute, but it sets up Whispers Like Splinters perfectly.
That track, along with S.O.S., keeps the intensity high as the album heads toward the finish line. Dustie Waring’s rhythm guitars sound massive throughout this entire stretch, giving the breakdowns a lot of physical weight.
The standout track for me is the closer, Forged By Failure. It’s nearly seven minutes long and shows how the band can still build a great, atmospheric build-up before hitting you with a massive breakdown.
The standout track for me is the closer, Forged By Failure. It’s nearly seven minutes long and shows how the band can still build a great, atmospheric build-up before hitting you with a massive breakdown.
It’s a great way to close out the record and feels like it’ll go down incredibly well live. You can already picture the crowd reaction when that final section kicks in.
At the end of the day, Season Of Surrender doesn’t rewrite the metalcore rulebook, but it doesn’t need to. It’s a solid, reliable, and incredibly heavy record from a band that still knows exactly how to write a great riff. If you've liked them before, you'll like this. 8/10
Guilt Trip – Armour Of Angels (Roadrunner Records) [Spike]
Manchester has a way of producing bands that just know how to graft. But while the Gallagher brothers made a career out of sneering in parkas.
At the end of the day, Season Of Surrender doesn’t rewrite the metalcore rulebook, but it doesn’t need to. It’s a solid, reliable, and incredibly heavy record from a band that still knows exactly how to write a great riff. If you've liked them before, you'll like this. 8/10
Guilt Trip – Armour Of Angels (Roadrunner Records) [Spike]
Manchester has a way of producing bands that just know how to graft. But while the Gallagher brothers made a career out of sneering in parkas.
Guilt Trip have spent the last decade building something infinitely heavier. This is their third full-length record, Armour Of Angels, and it is a massive, metallic hardcore steamroller.
You might have seen the headlines about their recent Adidas collaboration. Oasis did the three-stripes thing too, but you can bet Guilt Trip’s version of it comes with a lot more bruises.
You might have seen the headlines about their recent Adidas collaboration. Oasis did the three-stripes thing too, but you can bet Guilt Trip’s version of it comes with a lot more bruises.
This is a band that has stayed entirely true to the heavy, metal-worshipping strain of hardcore that got them out of sweaty basements and onto massive festival stages.
The album kicks off with One By One and immediately sets a bruising pace. This isn't just standard hardcore; it's a massive, riff-heavy blend that feels like the tough-guy stomp of 90s New York metalcore mixed with the razor-sharp guitar tone of classic Pantera. When vocalist Jay Valentine yells "Go!" on the opener, you know exactly what kind of ride you’re in for.
The guitar work from Jak Maden and Sam Baker is the real star of the show here. Tracks like Cut From God and Burn are absolutely festooned with squealing harmonics, chugging breakdowns, and solos that actually feel like they belong there rather than just showing off.
The album kicks off with One By One and immediately sets a bruising pace. This isn't just standard hardcore; it's a massive, riff-heavy blend that feels like the tough-guy stomp of 90s New York metalcore mixed with the razor-sharp guitar tone of classic Pantera. When vocalist Jay Valentine yells "Go!" on the opener, you know exactly what kind of ride you’re in for.
The guitar work from Jak Maden and Sam Baker is the real star of the show here. Tracks like Cut From God and Burn are absolutely festooned with squealing harmonics, chugging breakdowns, and solos that actually feel like they belong there rather than just showing off.
The second half of Burn is a total fretboard workout that is going to test the chops of a lot of bedroom players.
They also aren't afraid to stretch their legs a bit. On Dirt, they introduce some clean vocals that actually work without robbing the track of its grit. Veins is another standout, a sprawling, multi-layered highlight that builds into a massive, heavy-handed wall of sound.
And then you’ve got Resurrected, which features Sonny Sandoval from P.O.D. on guest vocals. It’s a wild, late-90s crossover that has absolutely no right to work as well as it does, but the contrast between the vocals is brilliant and it absolutely rips.
There’s an intermission in the middle to let you catch your breath, but otherwise, this is a relentless, front-to-back beating. It’s the kind of record that makes you want to throw a pint across a crowded room.
Guilt Trip have delivered a massive step forward from their last record, Severance. It’s heavy, honest, and proudly Northern. If you’re into big riffs, massive pits, and zero compromise, this is going to be on your turntable for a very long time. 9/10
Child - Rebirth (Heavy Psych Sounds) [Rich Piva]
I am not sure there could be a better name for the fourth album from the band Child. Rebirth sees the Australian band get a bit more down and dirty in the blues and get even deeper lyrically then before, creating one of the blues rock records of the year so far.
Heavy Psych Sounds did us all a favor by repressing the previous releases from Child, that are all excellent, with Rebirth being a perfect addition to their already amazing discography.
They also aren't afraid to stretch their legs a bit. On Dirt, they introduce some clean vocals that actually work without robbing the track of its grit. Veins is another standout, a sprawling, multi-layered highlight that builds into a massive, heavy-handed wall of sound.
And then you’ve got Resurrected, which features Sonny Sandoval from P.O.D. on guest vocals. It’s a wild, late-90s crossover that has absolutely no right to work as well as it does, but the contrast between the vocals is brilliant and it absolutely rips.
There’s an intermission in the middle to let you catch your breath, but otherwise, this is a relentless, front-to-back beating. It’s the kind of record that makes you want to throw a pint across a crowded room.
Guilt Trip have delivered a massive step forward from their last record, Severance. It’s heavy, honest, and proudly Northern. If you’re into big riffs, massive pits, and zero compromise, this is going to be on your turntable for a very long time. 9/10
Child - Rebirth (Heavy Psych Sounds) [Rich Piva]
I am not sure there could be a better name for the fourth album from the band Child. Rebirth sees the Australian band get a bit more down and dirty in the blues and get even deeper lyrically then before, creating one of the blues rock records of the year so far.
Heavy Psych Sounds did us all a favor by repressing the previous releases from Child, that are all excellent, with Rebirth being a perfect addition to their already amazing discography.
Woman Like You is pure blues rock beauty, both vocally and with that filthy guitar tone, and of course a woman who left and left him very, very damaged.
The pace picks up on Forgot How To Love with a riff that leans into the stoner rock territory but those vocals and the melody is some vintage Child blues goodness. Heavy Load has a Southern Harmony Black Crowes mixed with Skynyrd thing going on, which is obviously awesome.
Damned Heart’s riff lets you know you are in for some heartbreak which is confirmed when the vocals kick in. Rebirth has a very clear production value to it that in some spots if you turned up the clean more it would be a bit too much, but they never do go over the edge.
I mentioned “Child blues goodness” earlier, and here we are again with I Tried, which fits right in that slowed down Skynyrd territory. The most blues of the blues is on the closer, Cold Shoulder, which wraps up this, what I am hearing at least, bluesy concept record on love and loss and filthy riffs.
Actually, that is how I will describe Rebirth in one line. A record filled with love, loss, and filthy riffs. More killer blues rock from Child, a band that has perfected it, all the way from Down Under. 9/10
Okay You Win - End Of Days (Blues Funeral Recordings) [Rich Piva]
The guys in UK’s Okay You Win have been kicking around London’s underground rock scene for years now, honing their craft in various bands, waiting for the right time and combination in a band for them to really make their mark and take all their hard work to the next level.
Actually, that is how I will describe Rebirth in one line. A record filled with love, loss, and filthy riffs. More killer blues rock from Child, a band that has perfected it, all the way from Down Under. 9/10
Okay You Win - End Of Days (Blues Funeral Recordings) [Rich Piva]
The guys in UK’s Okay You Win have been kicking around London’s underground rock scene for years now, honing their craft in various bands, waiting for the right time and combination in a band for them to really make their mark and take all their hard work to the next level.
This is what you hear from their debut record, End Of Days, brought to us by Blues Funeral. End Of Days doesn’t sound like your ordinary debut album. What it sounds like is four guys who totally get it, and gelling to make an excellently executed and brilliantly written banger with zero skips, killer riffs, and next level lyrics.
Just take the opener, Smoke. There is this grunge meets stoner thing that on paper may sound like you have heard it before, but between the guitar tone, the vocals, and how expertly recording it is, Smoke stands out as one of the killer tracks of the year.
Just take the opener, Smoke. There is this grunge meets stoner thing that on paper may sound like you have heard it before, but between the guitar tone, the vocals, and how expertly recording it is, Smoke stands out as one of the killer tracks of the year.
I love the way the guitar chugs on The Greatest Lie, and how the band expertly changes speed and vibes on Beat Me Down. This Damned Place has this smokey stoner blues thing with some of my favorite lyrics on the record, while the title track is here to simply rip up the place via that riff and my favorite vocal performance by Dave Kirk on the record.
Speaking of ripping it up, Red Flag does just that, kind of reminding me of Soundgarden’s Kickstand. Ryan O'Hare’s guitar work here is next level stuff and both floats and punches you in the face. The grungiest track is Ten Year Trip, where the band is on full display, with the rhythm section of Rodrigo Barradas and Antonio Peci absolutely locked in.
The seven minute closer, Own It, ends the debut perfectly, hitting on all the high notes mentioned, with Kirk’s vocals and lyrics once again standing out.
If you didn’t know any better you would not think this could be a band’s debut, but End Of Days skips the part about the promise of a new band or a good start. Okay You Win are here right from day one in the big leagues, fitting in perfectly and leaving us all wanting more. 9/10
If you didn’t know any better you would not think this could be a band’s debut, but End Of Days skips the part about the promise of a new band or a good start. Okay You Win are here right from day one in the big leagues, fitting in perfectly and leaving us all wanting more. 9/10

