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This is 'Liberation through Amplification.'
Over the course of twenty five crushing minutes, the band show they
have honed their potent blend of crust, powerviolence, grind and sludge to
deadly perfection. “Hatred” feels like burying your face in a bowl of
razorblades while being kicked in the stomach.
“Hatred” CD//CS//DD//LP track listing:
1).
Rejected
2).
Regiside
3).
Corrupt
4).
Tortures
5).
Compton
6).
Grief
7).
Life Sentence
8).
Blue Berry
9).
Execution
10).
Dirtbags
11).
El Chapo
12).
Treason
The Review:
The
dust has barely settled from my recent exposure to Friendship’s
facemelting EP compilation. The Tokyo wrecking crew have wasted no time in
releasing their debut LP “Hatred”, a
relentless assault on the senses that cements their position as the current
masters of all things short, fast and horrible.
Over
the course of twenty five crushing minutes, the band show they have honed their
potent blend of crust, powerviolence, grind and sludge to deadly perfection. There
is a new found clarity and gut-churning heaviness to their bludgeoning
onslaught. This has resulted in a marginally less raw and chaotic experience
than before but still feels like burying your face in a bowl of razorblades
while being kicked in the stomach.
“Rejected” and “Regicide” open the record in furious fashion like a warp-speed Iron Lung. Both tracks
feature carefully deployed bursts of squealing feedback like a lead instrument,
particularly powerful during the cacophonous climax of the latter. “Life Sentence” and “Blue Berry” find Friendship
mixing in punishing, chug-heavy sludge riffs in amongst the high octane punk
mayhem that bring an intoxicating air of hardcore brutality. The bands interest
in the heavier and slower side of life is most evident in the monstrous “Corrupt”, a low tempo bruiser that
bristles with Eyehategod/Noothgrush sludge attitude.
A
re-recorded version of “Compton”
from the band’s debut EP makes an appearance at the LPs mid-point. It is
significantly burlier than its predecessor and encapsulates all that makes Friendship great in two minutes. Fret-mangling noise rock
riffs lead to passages of exhilarating knuckle-dragging simplicity, a perfect
balance of innovation and primal no-frills punk rock.
With
“Hatred”, Friendship
have delivered in style on the immense promise of their early work.
Aggressive
and fairly primitive with some elements of the more extreme death metal
sub-genre. Themes of oppression, injustice and warfare abound- classically
thrash all the way. This is Flawlessly
executed metal.
“Persecution Automated” CD//DD track listing:
1). Intro
2). Holocaust Ahead
3). Reign of the Mafia State
4). World Under Curfew
5). The Dreaded End
6). Slaughter Cleanse Repeat
7). Incarceration
8). Grip of Fear
9). Pathology of Domination
10). Clandestine Drone Warfare
The Review:
Bangladeshi
headbangers Exalter return with this razor sharp slice
of thrash. Following up the excellent EP, “Obituary
For The Living” was never going to be an easy task, but the band have done
it in style. With the album kicking off with an intro and an instrumental, you
know there is no sell out for more commercial territory. You are getting
thrash, plain and simple.
With
many of the old school bands having introduced melody to unacceptable levels,
it is nice to hear Exalter pressing
forward with vicious riffs, barked vocals and straight forward aggression. This
is thrash that is, I would say, a melding of Exodus, Sepultura and Sodom. Aggressive and
fairly primitive with some elements of the more extreme death metal sub-genre.
Themes of oppression, injustice and warfare abound- classically thrash all the
way.
The
likes of “World Under Curfew” will
get necks snapping everywhere and when the band drop to mid paced territory for
riffage on “The Dreaded End” for
instance, they do so solidly and convincingly. Naturally, the band always
favour pressing the pedal to the metal, whether it be on “Reign of The Mafia State” or “Slaughter
Cleanse Repeat” they do so with full conviction. The band keep things sharp
and focused throughout- this is a record made of songs that beg to be played
live- with songs not outstaying their welcome and deft use of time changes and
riffs- “Grip of Fear” being a prime
example.
When
the final two tracks have played out and the vicious “Clandestine Drone Warfare” has concluded, the final verdict is easy
to reach: the record won't change the world and or even the thrash genre, but
it would make a fine soundtrack to any one of the subjects that the band write
about it- and in thrash metal, there can be no higher compliment than that.
Flawlessly executed metal.
2017
was a fantastic year for music in general, and metal in particular. If you like
other sounds, this was the year pop from Kendrick Lamar to Lorde handed in
exemplary performances, and major artists went all in on Spanish-language music
(not to mention actual Latin artists like Luis Fonsi, J. Balvin and Bad Bunny
getting English-language exposure). We also got not one, but two, albums from
avant-garde patron saint Diamanda Galas and the visceral entertainment of
watching megastars fight like gladiators for relevance amid the surge of
music's young lions. There have been far worse years to be a music fan,
absolutely.
Paring
down to the best 25 releases is no easy task. Veteran and new bands made some
outstanding and highly recommended albums. Dying Fetus, Immolation and Kreator offered some
impressive works and proved one can still be innovative decades into an arc.
And you are seeing albums from Code Orange, Power Trip and Poison Blood on lots of
year-end lists for good reason: their recordings were really great and worth
your time.
If
you liked the aforementioned Galas as I do this year's bubbling up of noise and
just plain weird into metal, an admittedly weird music to begin with, was
really stimulating. Cavernlight's "As We Cup Our Hands” and “Drink From the Stream of Our Ache,"
Xanthochroid's"Of
Erthe And Axen: Act II" and Lorna Shore's"Flesh Coffin" are just joys
in this regard… joys in a furious, metal sort of way, but nonetheless enjoyable
for their tone, depth and diversity.
I
listen to and write about music of all kinds, and may pick stuff you hate. That
said, my metal releases this year:
25.
Royal Thunder, "Wick"
Metal
always has a lot of nostalgia for the 1970s, with major affinities for the
arena rock of Led Zeppelin and the fathers like Black Sabbath. One of the best inheritors of that tradition
is Georgia's Royal Thunder, whose bluesy, hard rocky
sound is one of the more faithful homages to the old school you will hear. What
vaults "Wick" into the
best-of 2017 is vocalist Mlny Parsonz, whose awe-inspiring voice makes you hope
Uta Plotkin gets into a studio soon.
24.
Paradise Lost, "Medusa"
An
all-time MVP like Paradise Lost this low
on a list (but still on said list) is indicative of how great metal was in
2017. The placement of the monumental "Medusa"
here is no shot; the UK's doom/goth trailblazers make consistently solid music
that has, over the years, matured, but is nevertheless some of the best there
is.
23.
Spectral Voice, "Eroded
Corridors of Unbeing"
It
is as if atmospheric black metal were dipped like an ice cream cone into a
thick, greasy soup of noise. Some may hate the churning of subgenres,
electronics and volume. Thankfully for you, Judas Priest is
coming back.
22.
Succumb, "Succumb"
Virtually
all the records on this list have some mammoth guitar work and riffs that are
quite memorable. Succumb is not one of those bands.
Instead its songs wind with at moments progressive, at other turns
punk/hardcore inflected, guitars washed to the bone with noise, distortion and
sheer modulation. 2017 was undoubtedly a year for sonority, with Primitive Man among the loud class. Succumb
just happened to end up valedictorian.
21.
Replacire, "Do
Not Deviate"
The
Boston band avoided the sophomore slump with a technical death metal record
that is as exacting and overwhelming as anything released in 2017. From clean
singing and growls to a superlative guitar attack, Replacire
crafted songs that were original while being slightly familiar. And yet the
quintet managed to stand out with an album that does death metal's history
proud.
20.
Introtyl, "Inside
of Violence"
Music
without understanding the people behind it is, we can probably agree, boring as
fuck. Mexico's all-female death metal dynamos offered an EP early in the year
that largely flew under the radar. Many reasons for that, surely. People ¯\_(ツ)_/¯’ing
music from Mexico/Latin America or female-led metal is probably part of that,
though you would probably hear lots of 'not me' to such insinuations. Coming
back to it, "Inside of
Violence" is affecting for its sound and its story of artists who have
put in quite a journey to get here.
19.
Cannibal Corpse, "Red
Before Black"
Controversial
for years, it is hard for Cannibal Corpse to make
shocking death metal when one has been pretty much the standard by which death
metal is judged. The band succeeded in lifting the bar a bit more with an album
that shows off its musicianship and insane songwriting. As usual, Cannibal Corpse's storytelling is not for casual metal
listeners, but its irascibility is certainly a treat.
18.
Tombs, "The Grand Annihilation"
Tombs' release was part of a larger
movement that saw many bands blending sludge and black metal this year. No one
in 2017 was quite as pensive as the Brooklynites, who have been doing it for a
decade. Its newest offering introduces vocals that make this one an almost
infernally operatic affair, while giving fans the slow-burn riffs and
unrelenting rhythms they've come to love.
17.
Cradle of Filth, "Cryptoriana:
The Seductiveness of Decay"
The
symphonic metal OGs have taken great pains to avoid categorization, but there
is something about their 2017 full-length sure to please most everyone. Grand
orchestration, striking riffs and prodigious vocals made Cradle of Filth's
newest one of the group's better recordings in its 12-deep catalog. In a year
where legendary symphonic acts like Carach Angren returned,
"Cryptoriana" ably showed
why Cradle of Filth is revered to this day.
16.
King Woman, "Created
in the Image of Suffering"
Kristina
Esfandiari's doom project explored, in 2015's "Doubt," her upbringing in a cult. Now a full band, King Woman comes back to these themes in the 2017
full-length. With more contributors in the fold, the release sees Esfandiari
turn in a sensational vocal performance. Here you will also experience lyrics
that are vulnerable, reminding us all that, while violence scars us, betrayal
cuts deeper. Accompanied by a pulverizing blend, "Created in the Image of Suffering" is nothing but
sublime.
15.
Elder, "Reflections
of a Floating World"
Stoner
metal torchbearers Elder turned lots of
heads with "Lore," its 2015
album of massive chords and progressive tilts aplenty. Lofty comparisons to Kyuss and major bands ensued. Undeterred, Elder made 2017 an active year, with several recordings on
the books. This one was by far the Massachusetts crew's best, taking its folky
asides and dreamy stylings into its most comprehensive collection to date.
14.
Pyrrhon, "What
Passes for Survival"
If
nothing else, this was a year for music and politics. Whether it was
top-ten-dead-or-alive rapper Vince Staples, indie icons Broken Social Scene,
Fiona Apple's anthem composed for the international Women's March in January, or
Joey Bada$$' magnum opus "All-AmeriKKKan
Bada$$," shit was not being taken from anyone in 2017. Metal, of
course, has always explored oppression and resistance, and rarely have such
subjects been nearly as potent. Pyrrhon presented by
far metal's most socio-politically conscious record of 2017, taking on bigotry,
inequality and climate change in the most fierce and uncompromising way
imaginable. The result? Music as commanding as its message.
13.
Heathen Beast, "Scam"
Heathen Beast brought out
the punk/hardcore aesthetic to its edge on "Scam,"
a seriously extensive rabbit hole of social and cultural exploration of life in
its native India. You might start Googling all the references and learning more
about castes and income disparities in that country of 1.3 billion people. Or
you may just take in the musicianship, which is stellar. Either way, metal is
better because of bands like this, and "Scam,"
like many influential records, gives us a glimpse into lives most of us know
nothing about.
12.
Dodecahedron, "Kwintessens"
Where
black metal has become a category of everything and nothing over the last
minute or so, what it means to make or claim black metal remains a big
question. Returning after a five-year layoff, Dutch masters Dodecahedron have risen up as the gatekeepers of some of
the subgenre's best qualities: fearsome vocals, relentless guitars and a
suffocating landscape of darkness. "Kwintessens"
is Dutch for "quintessence," an apt description for a breathtaking album.
11.
Monarch, "Never
Forever"
France's
doom outfit Monarch released an incredible album in
September, featuring a KISS cover and plenty
to talk about. Long known as a five-piece tending toward sluggish arrangements
and complex compositions, "Never Forever"
was a departure of sorts. Although its five songs came in at over an hour, with
all the glacial goodness you expect from Monarch, selections
like "Song To The Void" brought
a ghostly sheen to the music. As always, the band shone again with Emilie Bresson
on vocals, with her performance on the "Black
Diamond" cover and on "Lilith"
are among her best.
10.
Below the Sun, "Alien
World"
Who
does not love a good concept record? And 2017 featured some great takes. Few
were as compelling as Russian doom band Below the Sun's spin on
the 1961 science fiction novel "Solaris." In the Stanislaw Lem book,
scientists on a ship studying an ocean-covered planet discover the sea itself
is a single, world-encompassing organism that has been reading their thoughts
and fears and can cast those ideas into material form. Basing music in the Lem
classic is ambitious, but Below the Sun pull it
off with masterful atmosphere, weighty soundscapes and imagination that is
rare, even in this creative genre.
9.
Converge, "The
Dusk in Us"
I
confess Converge is in my top ten largely out of
peer pressure. It is rather high on many best-of lists, though it felt like a
(good and interesting) 1990s-style record when I reviewed it. Extraordinary?
Nope. Important? Not really. However, what Converge does well, it
does lavishly. As it is, "The Dusk
in Us" is an arresting return for Converge and will
likely be a sturdy album even in a year or two.
8.
Aosoth, "The
Inside Scriptures"
Over
the years, you have no doubt come to respect French black metal, which has
cultivated a reputation for extremity through the efforts of groups like Mütiilation, Blut Aus Nord and Deathspell Omega. Gone since 2013's "An Arrow in the Heart,"Aosoth rejoined the living this year, embracing the hints
of technical death metal it has incorporated before more fully on this six-song
package. While risky – there are many instances where black/death marriages can
sound like dour dumpster fires – Aosoth makes the relationship work through
attention to detail and its signature intensity. The result is magic… black,
beautiful magic.
7.
Akercocke, "Renaissance
in Extremis"
Since
its 1999 debut, "Rape of the Bastard
Nazarene," Akercocke has tended
toward a quirky appearance (suits, really?) and intellectual Satanism somewhat
reliant on postmodern liberal ideals (its debate with Christian activists is
the stuff of YouTube fable). After 2007's "Antichrist," the band ostensibly broke up, wrapping a
tantalizing black metal footnote. However, when a reunion and new album where
announced, inquiries of where the English progressive black metal quintet would
go next were abundant. The answers lie in goth, thrash and technical
ministrations – all seemingly eccentric yet at home with one the last true
metal iconoclasts. Although divergent from previous releases, Akercocke's latest is an honorable return to form, and
better than 90 percent of the metal recordings out there.
6.
Mastodon, "Emperor
of Sand"
Now
seven albums into its career, Mastodon is one of a
handful of metal bands that can be covered by Pitchfork yet aren't abject
garbage. Such a ruling was very uncertain for a second. The group saw
mainstream exposure with "Once More
Round the Sun," and you might have tasted the fear of Atlanta's
favorite sons going into some "Black Album" territory. Never fear,
for "Emperor of Sand" continues
this impulse to be accessible while remaining obtusely heavy. Where there is the
friendly "Stormbreather"
there is also windier "Andromeda."
These tensions between virtuous fidelity to metal and sinful coveting of dad
rock are palatable, if not wholly a part of our narrative. Yet Mastodon manage to stay on the good side of that line in
2017, with a record that deserves all the recognition it is getting.
5.
Zeal & Ardor, "Devil
Is Fine"
That
there is some consternation that this is even metal at all is endlessly
amusing. No, Slayer it isn't, but if we're being real,
how many Slayerfans
are particularly metal these days? What was once an idea that came from a 4Chan
exchange associating black metal and a racial slur has emerged as 2017's most
subversive metal album, pitching Black music into a style disproportionately
dominated by Caucasians. Manuel Gagneux's mash of black metal influences,
African-American gospel, prison work songs, techno (?!?!), blues and noise
fights actively against your expectations, gets topical without getting in too
deep for those who avoid such things, uses evil as an effective lyrical device
for human evil, and rages far harder than "Song
9,483 About Lucifer" by Pointless Metal Act. If you love artists who will
do things that make you question your music, you may enjoy what this Swiss
one-man act is up to.
4.
Enslaved, "E"
If
Enslaved aren't Norway's best-known metal export, it is safe
to say the band is currently the biggest. 25 years on, the group has built a
rabid following worldwide for its dense music borne of eclectic progenitors.
This go around, Enslaved continues a tradition that it has
gone with in recent years: a more celestial vibe that may at turns remind you
of Pink Floyd. Enslaved's
discography has leaned toward more driving tracks. On "E" the sound is purposeful, paced
and melodic. Rather than punishing, this is a sound you intake. And what an
injection it is.
3.
Myrkur, "Mareridt"
Given
how much praise "Mareridt"
received when it was released a few months ago, you might think it would end up
recognized by year's end. Alas, no, which is surprising, considering its merger
of folkloric elements, black metal and exceptional musicians is one of the more
forward-thinking metal releases of the year. Some of this exclusion could be
chalked up to backlash. Myrkur's Amalie Bruun
has received her share of attention this year – for matters like a Decibel
magazine interview distancing herself from black metal to closing down Facebook
messages over death threats she was getting. However, do know the world has a
lot of myopic assholes in it. The astonishing album still deserves the praise
it got, and a place at the table when we're talking about the best of 2017.
2.
Pallbearer, "Heartless"
Arkansas'
doom powerhouse is still young in its trip, but has won over many listeners
with compositions that break away from traditional themes and subtle sonic
environments that beckon you in. What is unique on "Heartless" and is most striking about Pallbearer is its sophistication. Vocalist Brett Campbell
gives his best performance to date, conveying passion, hope and dread at many
turns. The result is an album that has gotten well-deserved year-end buzz.
1.
Bell Witch, "Mirror
Reaper"
No
releases were as courageous or satisfying as Bell Witch's
glorious return this year. After losing half of the band's creative core to an
untimely passing, it would have been simple to hang it up and call it a day.
Yet Bell Witch reconstituted and dug hard,
examining the duality of life and death, featuring posthumous vocals from their
fallen comrade, in a single, 80-plus-minute track. A passing look might
consider such packaging as self-indulgence. A close listen reveals a fearless
and sorrowful exposition at a universal experience. "Mirror Reaper" had worthy company, but no peer this
year.
Rather
than retread classic sounds or noisy metal that is in vogue, Malakhim offer a debut that harkens to the best of what you
love while introducing you to what it sure to be a new favorite.
“Demo I”
CD//DD//LP track listing
1.
A Thousand Burning Worlds
2.
The Mass of Flesh
3.
The Golden Shrines
The Review:
Swedish
black metal act Malakhim makes its presence felt with a debut
that offers promise in a year filled with rejuvenated black metal performances.
"Demo I," a debut EP filled
with harsh tones, singing vocals and murky themes, manages to shake off initial
iffiness to leave you wanting far more.
There
is weird logic in some sectors of extreme music that suggests it is better to
simply let the music do your talking and to keep as much of the backstory of
the artists behind the scenes. 2017 has been dotted with those acts – bands
known by alphanumeric characters, masks or nothing at all. The times it works,
it is hard to quibble with success. While this lack of information can be
interesting or even mysterious, however, this self-indulgence misses a
fundamental part of why people bring musicians, actors or other entertainers
into their lives at all: people want connection, stories, mythology and
something with which they can identify. It also creates such distinctiveness to
music when people understand the artist's process and the context in which the
sounds were forged. The world is filled with dozens of legendary acts whose
personal trials, circumstances or beliefs formed what they created.
Picking
up Malakhim's debut demo, which is shrouded in
the mystery that has been a thing this year, you may at once be fascinated by
what is a strong first outing. Where it begins to sound like a lot of other
black metal or grindcore, you almost crave more detail to appreciate this
particular effort past a name that bears little identity.
There
are a few bits we know, such as players having been with Swedish black metal
bands Wormlight and Ancient Wisdom
(not to be mistaken with Austin act Ancient VVisdom). We
also know the quintet was formed in 2016. And listening to its debut record,
you get a number of influences, including noise, in its black metal sound.
The
first recording begins with "A Thousand Burning Worlds," a track that highlights the
gifts of the five-piece. Its abrasive rhythms and classic elements make this
opener familiar enough to draw you in, but yet unique enough to make you
appreciate the density for all it is. A return in metal to more corrosive
energy saw a renaissance in 2017, with established and emerging acts like Primitive Man, Septicflesh, Full of Hell and Ledge among those to
deliver volume and blasts of guitar far beyond the expected. Malakhim honors that movement from its start and into the
song "A Mass of Flesh,"
where guitars hammer you repeatedly and the distorted vocals careen over the
mountainous drums and bass. The double-ax assault continues into the final cut,
"The Golden Shrines."
Without revealing much, it is said that Malakhim is a seasoned
group, and that experience comes across clearly in both songwriting and
maturity in approach. Rather than retread classic sounds or noisy metal that is
in vogue, Malakhim offer a debut that harkens to the
best of what you love while introducing you to what it sure to be a new
favorite.
At
just three songs and a shade over 15 minutes, Malakhim's
first offering is powerful. What's more, "Demo
I" is a spectacular preview to what may assuredly be a legendary 2018
for the new crew.
Kenoma are firmly focused
on the metal side of the post-metal equation for the most part of “The Tides
Will Prevail” and manage to create huge, enveloping sound constructions reliant
on intricate interlocking guitar parts rather than a phalanx of effects pedals.
The albums extended gestation period has produced an absorbing set of finely
honed post-metal behemoths.
24.
No Funeral / Livid –“Split”
The combination of these
two bands on one mammoth slab of wax is a marriage made in hell. No Funeral and
Livid are definitely acts to check out now if you like it slow, heavy and
desolate.
23.
Aseethe – “Hopes of
Failure”
“Hopes of Failure” is
sparse and minimal yet packed with detail and intricacies, like Yob and
Unearthly Trance stripped of their psychedelic tendencies to let the raw
oppressive riffs do the talking. Aseethe have crafted a slow-burning
masterpiece that reveals more with each listen. Every spin increases the pull
of its hypnotic spell and leaves you with no option but to submit to its
crushing power.
22.
War Brides – “Regrets”
Chicago bruisers War
Brides raid the vaults of the noise rock greats to create a compellingly ugly
debut LP in the shape of “Regrets”. It is a quick and dirty shot of addictive
mayhem, channelling the nastiness of its influences to fine effect and offers
hints of evolution into a stranger beast over the course of future releases.
21.
Space Witch – “Arcanum”
The band still sound like
a collaboration between Bongripper, Hawkwind and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop
to create the ultimate sci-fi B-movie soundtrack, but this latest
release sees them develop their cosmic barrage further out into the void., they
showcase a leaner, meaner Space Witch that still push the boundaries of
heaviness but with a more streamlined attack.
20.
Norska – “Too Many
Winters”
“Too Many Winters” is a
captivating collection of powerful doom steeped in Norska’s unorthodox and
compelling personality.
19.
Stinking Lizaveta – “Journey
to the Underworld”
Stinking Lizaveta’s new
album “Journey to the Underworld” finds the band in deadly form, crafting music
that is seriously weird and complex yet still delivers an addictive riff high.
18.
Divide and Dissolve – “Basic”
Divide and Dissolve in
full flow is like a huge slab of noise reminiscent of UK low-end
warriors Bismuth and the sadly departed Palehorse. The band’s
distinct racket is simultaneously skeletal and super dense, with most of the
tracks consisting of slow-motion pounding drums and an oppressive wall of
discordant distortion. “Basic” is a powerful record in every sense.
17.
The Oxford Coma – “Everything
Out Of Tune”
“Everything Out Of
Tune” is a breath of fresh air at a time when heavy music is becoming ever more
reliant on recreation of past glories. The Oxford Coma delivers a welcome blast
of vital strangeness while still riffing harder than most of their peers.
16.
Wren – “Auburn Rule”
15. Helpless – “Debt”
Every track on “Debt” is
imbued with a captivating air of spontaneity and weirdness, delivered with a
terrifying level of intensity.
14.
Cranial – “Dark
Towers Bright Lights”
Cranial have honed their
Earth-shattering attack to razor-sharp perfection and expand the scope of their
music to galactic levels of grandeur. The band are a relentless riff
engine, churning out a constant flow of thick sludge, like Neurosis channelling
the almighty crunch of early Mastodon. “Dark Towers / Bright
Lights” does not break down any musical barriers but it is poised to blow your
mind with its dark intensity.
13. Grizzlor – “Destructoid”
“Destructoid” is a
record that fully lives up to its title. Grizzlor have served up a sumptuous platter
of riffs that effortlessly lays waste to the opposition.
12.
Coltsblood – “Ascending
into Shimmering Darkness”
Coltsblood refine their
unique brand of bleak, bludgeoning doom to punishing effect on “Ascending Into
Shimmering Darkness”. This is a mighty collection that marks out the band as
one of the most underrated heavy acts in the world.
11.
Cloud Rat / Disrotted – “Split”
This is an awe-inspiring
release from two incredible bands who can seemingly do no wrong at the moment
and continue to deliver an embarrassment of heavy riches in 2017.
10.
Hark – “Machinations”
9.
Friendship – “Hatred”
8.
Drunk In Hell – “s/t”
Drunk In Hell have
delivered what is easily the most horrible release of 2017. Seven years of
accrued filth and sludge has never sounded so good.
7.
Unsane – “Sterilize”
This is a flawless
collection of bile-soaked missives that set the standard for riff-heavy, ugly
noise rock in 2017
6.
The Ditch and The Delta – “Hives In Decline”
The Ditch and The Delta’s
sound is a killer blend of fret-mangling math rock and stoner doom aggression.
They strike a perfect balance between complexity, melody and no-nonsense gnarly
heaviness.
5. Cloud Rat / Moloch -
“Split”
4. In The Company Of Serpents – “Ain Soph Aur”
“Ain-Soph Aur” is a
heavy experience on all levels. The band have dialled back the volume and
slowed the tempo from previous releases which has unexpectedly resulted in
increased impact. This album is towering achievement from In The
Company Of Serpents. It is a fine addition to an already distinguished
discography and an inspiring work that sets the standard for heavy music in
2017.
3.
Pallbearer – “Heartless”
“Heartless” is an incredible
achievement from Pallbearer, a set of huge songs that consolidate the best
elements of their previous releases while moving into fresh sonic territory.
This is the album that should see the band make the transition into
stadium-bothering all-time greats, and deservedly so.
2.
Boris – “Dear”
From
the opening track, “D.O.W.N. –Domination of Waiting Noise–“, Boris conveys
punishing volume so effectively that your ears will ache at practically any
level. Every note and every layered vocal has been obsessed over, placed
perfectly in the mix, and acts as a distillation of twenty-five years of
intense collaborative synthesis.
1.
Converge – “The Dusk
In Us”
Today, with random acts of violence, anger and
pessimism dotting our timelines, maybe Converge just now seems like a
soundtrack to our contemporary apocalypse