Early Graves
Goner
Rating: 4.5/5
Listen To: Rot
Skip It: Nothing.
Skip It: Nothing.
All I can say to all my friends lately is "Holy fuck! Early Graves is awesome!" Their sophomore album, Goner, is a non-stop blowout of ferocious hardcore, dipping into thrash, punk and death metal for a smorgasbord of musical monstrosity.
Title track "Goner" jolts you into hysteria using a blaring siren effect, and then quickly slips into Early Graves's fast paced momentum. Chris Brock and Tyler Jensen's thrash knack is right at the fore front, buzz grinding through riffs like the best of 'em. The track provides a tasty breakdown with gut-ripping Terror-style vibrance. Enough said, I know, but I must go on.
"Rot" has an oldschool street tinge reminiscent of Victim In Pain era Agnostic Front. Raunchy guitar feedback rings over blasting drums before tempo slows for a crashing breakdown, and Makh Daniels venomously rips through the mic like a latter day GG Allin.
"Rot" leads seamlessly into another blastout, "May Day," which turns into a sludgy chug-fest for which Daniels keeps splattering his little black heart out. The song drowns out with over a minute of resonating guitar whine before "Wraiths" keeps the tempo down, relying on heavy metal riffing and more melodic feedback.
"Trauma," "Give Up" and "Bastard Tears" get your shitkickers moving again to their crashy, four-on-the-floor progressions. Brock and Jensen riff, chug, and solo around in amazing hooky fashion. Final track "Harm," another electroshocking feedback display, features John Strachan from The Funeral Pyre on vocals for a most furrow-browed album sender.
Simple yet one of a kind, Goner will leave you bloody nosed with its relentless energy.
Track Listing:
1. Goner
2. Faith Is Shit
3. Old Bones
4. Rot
5. May Day
6. Wraiths
7. Trauma
8. Give Up
9. Bastard Tears
10. Harm
Published by Tangible Sounds Magazine
No comments:
Post a Comment