Mid-summer has brought out a bevy of bleak, heavy and down-tuned releases. A perfect way to embrace the heat.
Disma Towards the Megalith
While I'm all for evolution in extreme music, sometimes that leads to musical dead ends. When death metal gets too technical, I'm just left cold. Give me crunchy riffs, heavy (if sloppy) bass lines and simple, pounding drumming and I'll be happy. The debut from this supergroup of sorts has all of that, along with enough musical chops to keep the listener fully engaged in the music. The guitar playing is tremendous, and any album that takes me to the "Vault of Membros" is a winner in my book.
Sourvein Black Fangs
You know another style that gets me right in the heart? Sludge. Again, it's music more about making noise and reaching for the heart than pure technical proficiency, and it's a style I've loved since making the jump into punk rock back in the mid 1980s (Minnesota had plenty of raw, sloppy and heavy bands back in those days, led by the likes of the Bastards, the Cows and Babes in Toyland). Sourvein first full-length in many a year again hits the sweet spot, moving easily between fast, aggressive noise and slower, heavy-duty jams.
Hail!Hornet Disperse the Curse
Considering that there are heavy connections between the two (band members, other bands that have included members, including Weedeater and the all mighty Buzzov*en) it's not a surprise that Hail!Hornet plies similar sludge and doom territory here, their long awaited sophomore release. You can heal the southern humidity and heat dripping off the songs, giving the whole album a thick, oppressive atmosphere that fits perfectly with these tales of hard drinking and hard living.
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