They call themselves "decidedly average" and playing "monotonous rock" and it does sound a bit fishy for me as their sound is far from being average, that's for sure. The Bristol-based band, throughout several years, released three EPs while getting ready to showing their LP debut. This finally happened at the end of August and I must say, the new album The Live Long After struck me with its sound.
I adore how loud their music feels. Thanks to the dispersed quality of the vocals and screams, the guitars seem to be even louder, so that the audience feels the noise in the whole bodies, every bone vibrates each time the music goes up. And it does it a lot - there's quite a lot of quieter parts where the clean vocals or even basses are put in the spotlight, only to get consumed by the rabid guitars sooner than later. This comes from various inspirations the band admits to having: from shoegaze to doom metal to stoner music, every one of them seems to be audible on this album. The quality of the noise is particularly impressive in the first songs of the album (after I Am Not Now - "an anti-hymn based on an ancient Byzantine chant" serving as an intro) with Shouting Judas at Bob Dylan being my personal number one.
There are also ballads here and I find them a bit less exciting. However, they represent the band's modus operandi, as the artists create things in slower pace, or, as they call it themselves, they "have a complete disregard for urgency", not to mention that even the slowest ballads here have to drown within the lovely ocean of noise eventually.
The Live Long After costs 7.5 EUR (12 AUD).
Check: Shouting Judas at Bob Dylan
Country: UK
Genre: noisy post-metal
Label: Small Pond Records/Art As Catharsis
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