Showing posts with label mathcore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mathcore. Show all posts

September 1, 2014

Rather Be Alive - Resiliència

Written by Justin C.


Way back in the late 90s or early 00s, when I was still living in NYC, I saw one of the strangest, avant garde guitar performances I've ever experienced. A relatively unassuming man came on stage with just an electric guitar and one amp, and he treated us to 90 minutes of squeals, feedback, pick scrapes, plinking the strings above the nut, and all manner of other tomfoolery. There was almost no melodic or harmonic structure to hang onto at all. After the show, I went to the men’s room and heard this brilliant summing up from some random drunk dude: "That's art. It's not music, but it's art."

That pretty well sums up how I feel about mathcore bands. Before hordes of Dillinger Escape Plan and Converge fans accost me, I don't mean that as an insult. When done well, I appreciate bands that play in that general territory, including Dillinger. But the unrelenting assault of dissonance, jagged rhythms, and general whatthefuckery engage a part of my brain that's adjacent to, but not directly connected, to the part that engages with music in general, so it's not a subgenre I revisit very often.

Enter the Barcelona-based band Rather Be Alive and their EP Resiliència. They self-identify as mathcore on their Bandcamp page, and I think that's a fair description. The vocals are hardcore bellows, the music is intricate, and there are plenty of quick-change shifts both melodically and rhythmically. But in spite of that, I find Rather Be Alive to be insanely catchy instead of mildly exhausting. The vocals are the perfect level of abrasiveness. When the vocals kick in the opening track, "Acaba amb Mi," I actually sing along with the line, "observa al teu voltan!" That's in Catalan, and I have no idea what it means, but the energy is so infectious that I still sing along. (A quick trip to Google translate gave laughably and obviously bad English translations of the lyrics provided on Bandcamp.)

The instrumental performances are all top grade as well. Check out the jazzy bass solo in "Acaba am Mi"--and when I say jazzy, I mean legitimate, high-quality jazz, not just a half-hearted attempt. The guitar solo that breaks out immediately afterward is a study in simplicity and catchiness. And that nuclear-powered-freight-train riff that opens up "Sense Fugir"! All of this is over drumming that's deceptive in its complexity, intricate without sounding like it's being done by dome futuristic drum-bot.

The EP is just a quick blast of three songs, offered for free download, but here's hoping we get a full length some time in the near future.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]

April 10, 2012

Bandcamp oldies from KEN Mode and Bloodshot Dawn



Recently KEN Mode won the Juno Award for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year for Venerable. To celebrate they have put up two earlier albums, Reprisal from 2006 and Mennonite from 2008, as name your price downloads on their Bandcamp.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]


Bloodshot added their 2007 EP Coalition of Terror to their Bandcamp and said: Check out the EP that really got the band going on the track to where we are now. Where they are now is off course their fantastic debut full-length from last year.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]

January 22, 2012

Burn Everything - Last Run Through The Ruins


Burn Everything - Last Run Through The Ruins. Let me start by saying that I like that title, it has a nice apocalyptic feel to it. Burn Everything plays grind and hardcore with lots of grooves and tempo changes - and some seriously pissed off screaming. Read this short review from Heavy Blog is Heavy and check it out.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]

January 11, 2012

KEN mode - Venerable


Artwork by Julie Anne Mann

Venerable, the new album by KEN mode is available at their Bandcamp. Venerable mixes punk aggression and noise rock with the guitar textures of post-hardcore. Here are two reviews from Invisible Oranges and Heavy Blog is Heavy and one by Dan Obstkrieg from Metal Review who says that the album has a wealth of nuance, confident songwriting, and straight-up fuck-your-mother attitude.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]