Sunday 23 October 2011

Review: Human Error '10 Reasons To Kill Your Boss And Destroy The Whole World' 7" (Total Addiction)

Hungary always stands apart from its neighbours in almost every respect, with its alien language (most closely related to Finnish) comes a whole different way of thinking from their Slavic neighbours, and whatever quality inherent in fast and chaotic powerviolence that resonates with Poles, Czechs and Slovaks, seems to have largely Hungary by, perhaps losing that spark which ignites the raging fire in its translation to Magyar.

Budapest's longrunning Human Error are seemingly the exception, forming in 1996 they're a rare Hungarian grind unit with an international following and reputation to rival their neighbours in the likes of Idiot's Parade, Gride or Lycanthropy. Freewheeling gaily out of Budapest's DIY crust scene in 1993 like neighbourhood scrotes on a stolen fixie, Human Error have kept that crust-caked chaos close to their hearts and '10 Reasons To Kill Your Boss And Destroy The Whole World' surfs atop a frothing title-wave of high octane d-beat that gets the heart racing and the fists pumping like a Fight Club-style bare-knuckle boxing match with Victims. All melodic guitar lines and blasting d-beats, and no doubt a cause for numerous edit wars between the highly strung life-virgins of Metal-Archives.com, their aggressive salvos seem perfectly at home in the same cancerous category of bloody-knuckled grind-punk as Phobia.

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