Sunday 31 July 2011

TRACK BY TRACK REVIEW: VADER 'WELCOME TO THE MORBID REICH' (NUCLEAR BLAST))

1. 'ULTIMA THULE'

No surprises – Vader love intros, used them on their last three albums (composed of a similar formula), and if it's necessary give numbers, they've been playing it safe for nine years. Fortunately, with ‘Welcome to the Morbid Reich’ this is about to change. Unlike 2009’s average ‘Necropolis’, ‘Ultima Thule’ is the first of only two intros, and even better – they're both adequately situated in the playlist. A grandiose, ceremonial opening, lightly merging into…


2. ‘RETURN OF THE MORBID REICH’


Which masterfully underlines the whole symphonic pomposity, before getting rid of it (for a while, at least) with one of the most extreme moments in the Polish veterans’ career. Piotr Wiwczarek’s mighty ‘uuurgh’ kickstarts a powerful combination of mindstorming blastbeat and thrashy, pleasantly organic riffage that wonderfully sets the beginning of arguably the best Vader album since ‘Litany’.


3. ‘THE BLACK EYE’


Then it’s time for the classic war march that ‘The Black Eye’ definitely is. With militaristic tempo, unforgettable riffs and the trademark short, ripping, yet strangely melodic solos, ready to drop you to your knees and cut your head off… Straight away!


4. ‘COME AND SEE MY SACRIFICE’


And while Behemoth constantly developed to reach the point where they almost went mainstream, but succeeded in remaining themselves and Decapitated showed people how technical death really should sound, Vader have always been the stronghold of traditionalism in the Polish metal scene. With songs like ‘Come and See My Sacrifice’ the band continue to be such, as this song isn't made to be heard, but to be experienced.


5. ‘ONLY HELL KNOWS’


Things get even more frightful when track number five – fast, ugly and merciless in it’s old school rage is spat out by this monster of a record. The song rarely reaches brainwashing speed or headcrushing heaviness, but it is as brutal as needed. Tortured opening riff and some of the most diverse vocals Pete has ever exhorted. This is Vader at their most grotesque!


6. ‘I AM WHO FEASTS UPON YOUR SOUL’


One of the album’s most epic moments, ‘I Am Who Feasts Upon Your Soul’ starts with an almost Zimmer-ish symphonic interlude and after a brilliant guitar bridge (similar to the bridge on the cover artwork, but built in music form), slowly turns into the beast it has to be. Mid-tempo death metal madness with rich, doomed atmosphere and an amazing solo.


7. ‘DON’T RIP THE BEAST’S HEART OUT’…


Starts directly from a great string-duel between Pete and Spider. Bombastic blastbeat adds more weight to the solid main riff and probably makes Doc proud of his ex-colleagues in his boiling cauldron there in the underworld. Don’t worry Doc, songs like this one concrete the quartet strong positions in Hell. They’ll soon be your new neighbours.

8. ‘I HAD A DREAM…’


Sinister is the solemn way in which the second part of ‘Welcome to the Morbid Reich’ continues to sound as ‘I Had a Dream…’ adds another epic note in the album as if Vader are currently celebrating some triumph of evil.


9. ‘LORD OF THORNS’


‘Lord of Thorns’ easily explaines why the band are often described as ‘death-thrash metal’ and, let’s not miss the subjective element – this is how the subgenre should sound. To be specific, more death than thrash. And proudly embracing the as-many-as-possible principle when it comes to the ripping solos. Legion Of The Damned – take some notes, please, or don't come back.


10. ‘DECAPITATED SAINTS’


It’s truly difficult to compare when the quality of a given release is at this height, but ‘Decapitated Saints’ is probably the most brutal track, not only in ‘Welcome to the Morbid Reich’, but in the band's entire career. From the song-title, through yo the harrowing speed Peter shoots his vocals out, to the final blood-freezing call.


11. ‘THEY ARE COMING'

The second interlude and the soundtrack to a terrifying satanic ritual.

12. ‘BLACK VELVET AND SKULLS OF STEEL’


Perfect epitaph with the slowest and obscurest number on this full-length. It’s definitely not an accident that all ends with a single call to arms: ‘HELL!’. Surprise or not, this is one of Vader’s strongest albums and an unexpected return to form.

Saturday 30 July 2011

INTERVIEW: DEATH FROM ABOVE... D-BEAT BUT NOT BEATEN

Rafael Yaekashi of Japan's Karasu Killer Records is on a mission, he wants to unite four of the nastiest, crustiest bands he can find in one toxic disc - '4WayForDestruction', out August 27. Not content with just unleashing that into the world by itself, he's interviewed each band involved (with pics from Eder Sales Cave), starting with Glauco Mingau of Brazil's furious d-beat hellions Death From Above.

Tell us a little about the band’s history, the discography, the first shows. And also, what’s the meaning of the band’s name?

"The band began in the beginning of 2006, I was bored enough because my two other bands I was playing with had broke up by it - Neurose Urbana in 2004 and Chaotix in the end of 2005 - and I wanted to start another band, but this time want to do a sound in the style that I love: D-BEAT! Since I'm a d-beat maniac, I chose the name Death From Above because of Discard 'Death From Above' 7" EP. Besides being one influence in our sound, Discard was the first band to use the Discharge logo, thus declaring their total passion to the Discharge band.

"Then I began to think about this new project. So, I called the Thiago, who was playing in the Sociofobia, to play bass and called the Ratão, who was the drummer of Neurose Ubana, to give us a help as drummer to compose some songs. Since there were no others drummer to play d-beat here in the city he accepted. then we did about six songs, played a gig and then he got out from the band. Next we called Hassan, who was drumming in Sociofobia and guitarist of Desastre, to play. We did the demo 'Lost in the Insane War' with him on drums, it was cool because I had already played with him before in Chaotix. Shortly afterwards of that he got out from the band, but this time we had our eyes on a friend of ours, Slake who is the singer in WCM and was playing in a new band called Asas Da Vingança. I realised that he had a good style and that perhaps he could play with us. We did some tests, but the his drum beat wasn't quite d-beat, so I showed him how to play the d-beat and with the time he was catching the beat and was perfecting his style. The good thing is that he has a heavy beat that makes me remember Ratão playing in Neurose Urbana. This happened in the beginning of 2007, then we begin to work new song and to do shows. 2007 and 2008 were very good for us, we played a lot, maybe about two shows monthly. It helped give the band more 'gas' in the sound, in a sense, and left it more cohesive. Also we use a strategy of 'non stop show' like in the Discharge live album 'The Nightmare Continues'.

"About recordings, what I can say is that we are a band without luck! After we recorded the demo 'Lost in the Insane War' in the end of 2006, we recorded three songs - including cover of Disclose - in 2007, two were for a split 7" EP and other would be for a tribute to a Disclose. The split never came out because another band, Kandiru, from Minneapolis, US, broke up and the tribute to Disclose... simply, they took us off the CD. Then in 2008 we recorded the CD digipack 'Death Comes' but it was only released in 2009. Also in 2008 we played in Gama-city with Besthoven  for a DVD recording and our set was recorded, mixed by Frango from Galinha Preta, but it is still unreleased! Our CD 'Death Comes' was to be released by the Speed State records from Japan, but in the process they stopped writing, so I gave up and decided to release in the local label TBONTB - Two Beers Or Not Two Beers - and my own Mingau's Productions. That was much better because we had a good distribution. Still in 2009, we recorded two more songs for another split 7" EP with Dead Section from Portland, US, because they were coming to Brazil for a tour, we were set to tour with them but the band split up and they gave up on doing split 7 "EP, in this time time we had already sent our complete stuff for them because the were the ones who were going to press it. Well, in the end of 2009 we did our second tour in São Paulo for 'Death Comes', we did about six or seven shows, a good but very stressful tour, so when we got back home Thiago got out of the band and Danny,  ex-Desastre, was invited to play bass. With him on the bass we recorded two more songs for another attempt to do a split 7" EP with War/System from England, but that didn't get released either because the guy I was in contact with, the vocalist, who was also pressing the 7" left the band. So, we lost heart and gave up. Then we decide to use one song for a four-way 7" EP, still in progress. In the beginning of 2011 we recorded four songs for our debut '4 Trax EP', will be released in 7" and tape version with two bonus songs by Bombs Away Records, coming soon. Also this year we recorded a one song cover of 'War's No Fairytale' by Discharge for the Discharge Brazilian tribute CD, in progress too, and finally last May we recorded three songs for '4 Way for Destruction Vol 2' that will be out next August."

What are the themes in the lyrics? How’s the writing process?

"I write the lyrics, and different from many bands that play d-beat I try not to write lyrics only about war even though it's still a recurring subject. I try to write about human questions with acid criticism and how loneliness is an intrinsically human characteristic. I haven't a process for composition, it just happens, inspiration comes day by day, from announcements on the TV and from the world around us. All of these are influences and become inspirations for the compositions."

What are your biggest influences?

"When I thought to start the band I hadn't got a formula for the type sound that we would be going to play, but certainly we didn't want to be a sound clone of another band. The basic influences at the root of our sound are Discharge singles, Antisect demos, old Disclose, Discard, MG15, Unruled, The Inconoclast, Diatribe, Final Warning, Fader War, Disaster, Underage, old Crow, UBR, Olho Seco, and more, but it has been changing a little with the change in bass player. We are trying to have a more structured sound, but we are still in the same raw d-beat vibe.

Do all the band members have a day job, or do you live off your music? What’s the hardest thing about having a band in Brazil?

"I have informal jobs, I have a small silk screen office, also I'm a DJ and play at local parties, but I also do some cultural events, concerts and parties - this is where I get my money. Slake is working at my old job in a binder, a kind of graphic place but smaller. He works closely with the Wilton from Desastre, Danny was fucking unemployed, we hope he finds a job soon to help pay practice studio for the band hahaha! Now, the greatest difficulty to being in a band in Brazil is the lack of support to produce and spread word of bands, also the lack of space for concerts, all this bother. Another thing is the lack of support from the public who still insisting on not paying the tickets, always asked to enter free and refuse to buy material produced by the bands, which would greatly help them to keep producing albums and merchandise. These are all difficulties but as we're not in it for money or fame, we'll continue to make noise!"

And the current state of Brazilian underground, what’s good and what’s bad? Is there support? What’s the band’s opinion on the punk/hardcore scene in Goiania ?

"Good? I can't say exactly, but today things are a little more easy than ten years ago, at least here in Goiania. The scene is small but has been quite active in recent years and there's union and a good level of cooperation among the punks, anarcho, hardcore, thrashers, etc... this is one factor that I consider very good for our scene. Goiania has shows every week and there have been many new bands and producers as well. Currently we have fixed the following events: Noise For Heroes, Music For Zeros that I do, and had brought Darge from Japan to play. Punks Not Profits, Underground Forces, Thrashcore Fest, among other events more sporadically but with some regularity."

In what other projects are and were the current band member involved?

"I've had many projects in the past. I played in Neurose Urbana from 1993 to 2004, in Chaotix from 2003 to 2005, and in Refuse from 1994 to 1996. Disastre was formed by me and Wilton, along with Fofão and Ratao but this line-up lasted a short time. I played in the Besthoven in a time where both Neurose Urbana and Besthoven had no bassist, and we were sharing the same drummer. I played bass in Besthoven, Fofão and he played bass in the Neurose Urbana in 1996, but we didn't gig. I also played in the band Lixo when they moved to Goiania, the band included the Marcelo Holanda aka Kamikazi drummer in Nailbiter. Besides doing the vocals in WCM, Slake plays in Asas da Vingança, but that band stopped, for all I know. Danny played in the Desastre for a long time, but he also played with me in the Chaotix, and he also played guitar in Asas da Vingança."

What the band members listen to nowadays?

"I listen to many different music style, but two bands that I'm a fanatic about and I never stop listening to are Discharge and The Cure. I like many classics of different styles, like punk, hardcore, post punk, goth, rock etc... Danny listen to similar music like me, but I don't know what he's listened to recently. Slake like tons of hardcore, fast, crust, punk and rap. I do not know which bands he's listening to right now but I know they're fast bands hehehe!"

Since 2003 there’s a new wave of punk/hardcore bands coming around in Brazil. How do you see this revitalization? Which bands/artists do you consider prominent?

"Yes, some good and great things have been happening over the last few years and that is very encouraging. We were in need of good bands again in Brazil, and the best thing is that they are are treading their own paths without relying on others, and even without creating intrigues and competition. It has been of great value to the current scene that many friendly bands that help and work together have appeared. For me the strongest bands are Whipstriker from Rio de Janeiro, Unfit Scum, Nuclear Frost, and Social Chaos from São Paulo, Terror Revolucionario, Murro no OlhoSubterror, and Violator from the area around Brasília, Gritos de Alerta and Chaca from Rio Grande do Sul, and more ... they are many good but these are the ones that I can remember now."

What would you guys be doing if it wasn’t for punk/hardcore in your lives?

"Man, sincerely I do not know. I've been a punk since I was young, when I was forming a personality, so it's hard to think about what it would be. I always liked music, I do not know, but perhaps I might have been a professional DJ, because I remember a moment before becoming punk that I liked the DJ world, observing the guys playing vinyl in the parties etc... that never went out from my head. Perhaps I would have gone by that way. I think that the same thing for Danny and Slake, they are already everything that they want to be. Danny has been a punk since he was 13 years old, and he's got no motive to change, and Slake was also in this since he was kid. Perhaps they wins in lottery! Hahaha!"

More and more we talk about corruption, violence and unemployment in Brazil. What do you see for the country’s future?

"These things have been happening in Brazil systematically, for decades until today and have not had a significant attitude on the part of governments to change this depressing situation in which Brazil finds itself. Every election comes new promises of change mainly to health, education, work against violence, corruption, unemployment these basic things for life to proceed. But what happens are more scandals involving politicians and no improvements. People are tired of being cheated and lack of confidence in the government is growing, and it's only going to worsen. As for me, I don't believe in government. I know it's there to fuck me."

How would you like Brazil to be?

"In the financial part, the same as the Swiss. With regard to culture, literature, cinema and music as in England, Germany, Czech Republic, Spain. In Italy as a culinary item, but Brazil is well served, there is lots of good food here. Well, this is just a dream, there is no perfection in a nightmare world!"

Monday 25 July 2011

BAND OF THE DAY: WHIPSTRIKER

Fuck yeah, Whipstriker! You don't even need to hear this to picture leather-clad, pouting neo-punks in skinny fit Discharge t-shirts standing around some sort of contrived oil drum fire, while Fenriz bounces up and down in his computer chair with glee like a baboon with an itchy arse. Who cares what they sound like, send vinyl fast! Mother, get out the sewing machine, I need another patch-... why?! BECAUSE THIS BAND ARE THE BEST IN THE WORLD. NO, SHUT UP, I DIDN'T SAY THAT EXACT SAME THING ABOUT CHILDREN OF TECHNOLOGY LAST WEEK. GOD, SHUT UP, JUST SHUT UP, YOU DON'T KNOW ANYTHING.

Forming in 2008 in Rio de Janeiro as a one-man-band in the Toxic Holocaust model (he's been a live member in Joel Grind's thrash metal circus, so he at least learnt from the master) based around the titular Whipstriker, who's carved out a reputation for himself in metalpunk through tellingly monikered bands like Apokaliptic Raids. With the usual narrow spectrum of influences that can usually be distilled even further to post-2006 Darkthrone, Whipstriker crank out d-beating, Motörcrusting primitivism with no surprises, just enough gritted teeth and mean-spirited groove to soundtrack the local Hell's Angels chapter.

Since releasing their first demo in 2010, 'Midnight Crust', very little has changed sonically, which is to be expected when there's only one of you and the bands you're taking pointers from can be counted on Rick Allen's fingers.

Sunday 24 July 2011

DON'T MISS IT: DISMA & WE ARE THE DAMNED

Unlike the majority of genres, united under the extreme music banner, death metal rarely ‘suffers’ from ‘more of the same’ which in many cases is more a promise for the quality of a given record, and New Jersey’s freaks Disma demonstrate it by summoning up those old demons on their debut full-length. They’re the newest and freshest corpse buried in Profound Lore’s lurid crypt and as everyone who has somehow managed to retain his sanity knows, once you enter its narrow, unlit tunnels, you either leave them with well shaken psyche, or remain walled in between these ancient stones forever. So it’s obvious that whatever happens on ‘Towards The Megalith’ (some sadist has decided to stream the album), it happens in completely different reality. Disma are composed of professional death metal occultists, the most obvious being ex-Incantation frontman Craig Pillard, whose deep growls always sound like the last painful cry of a dying mammoth and form terrifying Impetuous Ritual-like atmosphere. Walking through the halls of his sick imagination guarantees loads of twisted visions that remind of his classic appearance on ‘Onwards To Golgotha’, an album that, as if you need to be told, paved the way for 90% of the satanic death metal hordes. The riffs are simple, massive and addictive, absorbing the early '90s traditions in goat warship and the spirit of new leaders like Portal, Mitochondrion and Vastum. ‘Towards The Megalith’ is an audio gate to the haunted post-apocalyptic world.


And while Disma consume souls slowly but inevitably like some ancient evil, Portuguese terrorists We Are The Damned explode suddenly, deafeningly and deadly, leaving only ashes behind them. ‘Holy Beast’ has everything a secondLP can need – power, clever song-writing, intentions, insisting yearning to prove itself and of course, conviction. Hardcore dynamics meet death 'n' roll nastiness on killer songs that sound so concentrated on the surface, but immediately storm chaos in the mind, make you unable to control your pulse, and more importantly – your actions. They have to be here, representing the entire anger of our societies and pulling out one of 2011’s key albums. ‘Holly Beast’ simply demands extreme responses.

Saturday 23 July 2011

INTERVIEW: EVISORAX GET THEIR SHIT TOGETHER

Don't be ashamed to admit that two years ago you completely wrote off Evisorax. It's okay, they don't mind.

In a very short time, the Wigan-based grindcore trio went from being the sort of furious young hellions that British grindcore lacks, able to get nods of approval from knuckle-dragging death metallers, ADD grindcore fans testing the quality of their coloured vinyl by smell, and pouting, posturing scenebros thanks to a wonderfully ambiguous concoction of shifting, firecracker fretbroad abuse,  straight up wailing brutality and tremendous energy, to being pretty much dead in all but name.

“A whole shitstorm of internal bullshit is what happened,” admits guitarist and sole surviving founding member Daniel. “Keith [drums] and Pete [vocals] left the band and I was pretty much left stood alone, this was especially crippling after all the positive reviews, acclaim, sixth best newcomer '09,  two UK tours as well as all the other shows and the 'Enclave' release. It basically all went to waste as there was nothing I could do at the time.

So these last two years have been spent writing, rehearsing and getting a new CD together with Brod on drums, formally of Narcosis and currently of The Ergon Carousel, and Chris, former Carmen and current Ergon Carousel also, on vocals.”

Aside from the internal strife, the label that released their well received debut EP vanished less than acrimoniously, leaving more drama in its wake, and seeing more than a few people update their shit lists – not to mention that the label they were first involved with was run by the king of all shit cunts. Daniel confirms that both experiences have soured his attitude towards labels, but he remains pragmatic.

“That's life and it's taught me a great deal as well as making more contacts so it is what it was and that's the end to it. It's definitely made me more cautious as to how I approach labels and more aware as to what I'm looking for, I don't think I would ever get in bed with a label ever again, it would take a lot for me to do that. These days I'm looking more for limited releases as opposed to recording contracts. There again, DIY seems a pretty attractive option, once you have the fanbase and know what you're doing then there's not a great deal a label can offer you that you cant do yourself, you just need the hard work ethic and the commitment. Obviously though there's times and situations where a label really would come in handy.”

What fanbase or buzz they may have lost through activity will easily be balanced by the incoming XP from Brod and Chris, the latter famously (or infamously, if you considered it a travesty and you're a complete dick) standing in as vocalist on Insect Warfare's posthumous UK tour.

“Seeing as Narcosis were a Wigan-based band and so are Evisorax, I've known Brod and the lads for a long time now,” he expands on how the current line-up came together. “We actually have practice rooms facing one another across a hallway so it was pretty logical. After Keith left I approached Brod as I didn't know of anyone nearby who could help piece this together and move to the next stage as well as being on the same page as me musically. As for Chris, he's the vocalist in The Ergon Carousel with Brod, we'd met before at a show we played and really hit it off so it just seemed a given to ask him if he'd be interested. As for them being permanent, I really hope so but you never know as I learnt with Pete and Keith.

“I was only in my teens when I saw Narcosis on tour with Pig Destroyer and blew me away, I did even realise we were from the same town and had been a big fan ever since. So when it came down to emailing Brod MP3s of the songs I had made on my PC for him to get the ideas to put drums to, it was a bit of ''what the fuck is happening!?' moment, and totally surreal. But Brod's a sterling chap and was great about everything! And Chris is a fantastic guy and has a lot of drive so to hear them both be totally into this and really on board is great. Claiming the main support on the Wormrot tour was a great feeling as it was something I could say to them ''look, this is working'.”

Aside from touring with Singapore grinders Wormrot on the UK leg of their European tour in September, Evisorax have finished work on their first full-length, which is being mastered by Pig Destroyer/Agoraphobic Nosebleed's Scott Hull, and featured some input from Insect Warfare drummer Dobber Beverly who, er, helped them set up and made suggestions.

“This time around I wanted to make the most pissed off, bile fuelled, disgusting, uncomfortable and venomous recording I could,” enthuses Dan about the material. “Like the soundtrack to murdering someone. That you could actually envisage a serial killer slaughtering people whilst he has this record blasting on his MP3 player. Just pure hostility and violence, not that its in any way gore, just totally violent.

“I think it's more straight grind edged this time too, shorter songs but still has everything packed in to it, I think the writing skills have been refined and honed in as well. The concepts are a lot more developed and matured as well. I can't wait to unleash this CD, seriously, I have high hopes for this bastard and hope to get Evisorax back to where it was and further!”

Friday 22 July 2011

REVIEW: DESTROY JUDAS 'WAKE' (SELF-RELEASED)

Genre super-classification upsets musicians because it somehow reduces their art to a set of simplistic building blocks, and that's not always unjust, it often is constructed out of a set of simplistic building blocks and they'd rather you thought of it as the magical end result of three months mediating under a waterfall. Destroy Judas' 2011 EP 'Wake' (stream below or name-your-price download) is template atmospheric crust in very much the same way that Star Wars is a film about space wizards - it blatantly is, but people who like it would rather over-romanticise it as a hand-woven miracle, than something that came from a press-out sprue kit.

Covering similar territory to Morne, Fall Of Efrafa and all those other heavy-lidded bands lurking in that poorly lit Neurosian nexus where sludge, crust, post-metal, doom and lapping tides of bongwater meet, playing off their perfectly construct ambiguity that lends them no ambiguity at all. There're tribal drum fills, dense and ponderous slowbuilds, crashing riff waves, and euphoric eruptions like breaking through the layer of stormclouds to stand, breathless in the cold sunlight at the top of Mount Doompatch Postcrust, and other obvious elemental metaphors. Made up of veterans of such intimidating OC outfits as Phobia, Asunder, Lachrymose, Crisis and others no sane man has the time or patience to list, it's fair to say that their collective skill, experience and sheer passion for playing music with a track record of being its own reward, transforms something that'd be profoundly dull in other hands, into something heartaching, earnest and downright amazing.

Like Star Wars, it's perfectly possible for something to be contrived and really, really good.


REVIEW: THE AFTERNOON GENTLEMEN 'PISSDOGRAPHY' (GIVE PRAISE)

It's always a bit lame and patronising to make proclamations about a band's career trajectory (especially when you're talking about bands who probably don't have one). It widens that already oceanic gulf between people who sit on the internet writing about music, and people who actually get face first involved in music, but nevertheless Leeds' filthkickers The Afternoon Gentlemen have begun to take on the sort of feverishly received reputation of similar fast and grubby powerviolence outfits like Spoonful Of Vicodin and Lycanthropy.

Everyone either wants to see them or talk about how they want to see them, and then not bother.

Constantly touring mainland Europe where people care about such things, their 38-song 'Pissedography' (streamable below or on Bandcamp) captures their complete split and singles archive of table-thumping drum battery as it careens drunkenly through similar basement show territory to No Comment, Spazz and Despise You, all punkish clattering and euphoric, hungover groove parts. Production is rickety, but achieves that sought after balance, keeping things immediate and raw, dripping with sweat, White Ace and filter papers, without obscuring the actual tunes in an unwanted slurry of snare and reverb.



Thursday 21 July 2011

REVIEW: DECAPITATED 'CARNIVAL IS FOREVER' (NUCLEAR BLAST)

I just don’t stand on my own!’

Such is the definite statement on the eagerly awaited ‘Carnival Is Forever’: Decapitated are ‘United’ once again, and a few years after the traumatic loss of a brother and the near death of a friend, they’re neither inactive, nor a sad and empty tribute act, playing all the usual songs at all the usual festivals. With his band jolted from its coma, sole surviving original member Vogg is suffering the old pain even more dramatically, yet this same pain is his drive. Joined by three new members (now two after the recent departure of bassist Heinrich) – vocalist Rafal Piotrowski and talented young drummer Krimh, the (obviously) immortal Polish death metal institution thoroughly, precisely reinforce their uncompromising worldview, finding its most felicitous and genuinely artistic expression in the process.

Now Decapitated are nothing but wiser, more solid and undoubtedly more uncompromising.

Following this train of thought, it’s easy to understand why they return with ‘The Knife’ in their hands – a genuinely brutal, violent and in this very case, fair way to open a new page both as a team and as a collection of different personalities. Given that 2006's ‘Organic Hallucinosis’ was the band’s most evolutionary 32 minutes, proving to be one of the classics in technical, ‘Post-Organic’ extreme/death metal, ‘Carnival Is Forever’ really shouln't be as impressive. Especially when Decapitated are almost entirely new band. However, their fifth full-length is not just impressing, but it also shows some unexpected new motions, erupting here and there that always manage to keep the listener’s adrenaline at dangerous levels. The most obvious being of course the clean guitar theme that builds to album closer ‘Silence’ in its totallity. Great moments are the dark interlude, followed by an echo-ing flageolette, and one of the very best riffs of 2011 on the title-track and the absolutely dismembering attack of ‘Pest’.

While they’re cynically met by the stupid, needless, endless and whorish scepticism, Decapitated still continue to be the same bullet-proof wall of sound. This truly is their triumphant moment. Brutal and grotesque, the ‘Carnival Is Forever’!

Wednesday 20 July 2011

BAND OF THE DAY: ASSAULT

The first Band of the Day in just over a month, and to compensate it's the most lo-fi, clattering shit that can be unearthed, the sort of music that sends the posers screaming and wailing off back to their collection of Toxic Holocaust vinyl, and leaves the true, stalwart sons of crust gazing meaningfully in pride, the urge to rage hard rising in their chests. Or something like that.

East Jakarta's Assault formed as a side-project for a number of prolific musicians in the Indonesian crust scene who weren't quite as prolific as the band's core liked, resulting in them being repopulated by members of DeadSystem, Arianggara and others, and getting them into the furiously kinetic place where they could blast out the ten tracks of buzzsaw crust punk that make up their Anti Cimex-approved 2009 demo 'Here We Are'.

If only they weren't too punk rock to be active on the internet and let us know what they're up to, eh?