Visitant â Rubidium Review
By Owlswald
No matter if youâre a seasoned band or new to the game, choosing the right pre-release track is critical when kicking off PR for a new album. And in a crowded music scene, where everyone is fighting to make their mark, the challenge is even greater: can you leave a lasting impression in the first few minutes to make me want to keep listening? Pensacola, Floridaâs Visitant did just that with âStarless,â the first single from their debut album, Rubidium. Taylor Tidwellâs (Unaligned) blackened riffing, the death-infused rhythms of drummer Anthony Lusk-Simone (Abiotic) and bassist Kilian Duarte (Abiotic, Scale the Summit), and the tormented shrieks of vocalist Chelsea Marrow (Voraath) grabbed me immediately, leading me to promptly snag the full promo from the bone pile. Intended to be a departure from the membersâ other projects, Rubidium offers a visceral and harrowing descent into a hellish, otherworldly state driven by profound loss and torment.
Visitant blends their tech-death roots with the classic symphonic black metal sound to craft Rubidiumâs spiritual aura. The recordâs haunting mood is immediately apparent on âUnworldly,â which opens with a sinister orchestral passage that quickly gives way to a vicious miasma of Marrowâs icy rasps, Lusk-Simoneâs malevolent blasts and Tidwellâs eerie leads. The progression is reminiscent of early Cradle of Filth and gets the album off to a strong start. The performances on Rubidium are solid across the board, with Visitant skillfully blending technical precision with raw feel. The dynamic interplay between Tidwellâs guitar and Lusk-Simoneâs drums create a stylish balance. The two frequently push and pull, creating a dialogue that feels synchronized but also spontaneous. Marrowâwho has lent her vocal talents to video games like Doom Eternal and Senuaâs Saga: Hellblade IIâcontributes her versatility, conjuring vengeful spirits through an expressive sĂ©ance of rasps and hoarse growls (âFodder,â âStarlessâ), Gojira-encrusted hymns (âRubidium,â âBriarsâ) and ethereal croons (âMoon Bathe,â âEnvyâs Lamentâ). Itâs evident she has great range, but her sparse use of her striking cleans is disappointing and could have been a game-changer for the groupâs sound.
Rather than relying on the guitar to take center stage, Lusk-Simoneâs technical drumming drives Visitantâs eldritch sound with powerful, forward-moving energy. His precision blasts, acrobatic fills and progressive rhythms imbue Rubidium with an aural restlessness, balancing Tidwellâs Opethian chords (âRubidium,â âUnworldlyâ) and moody refrains. This creative reversal of a common metal paradigmâwhere guitars are the heart and soulâallows Lusk-Simoneâs performance to shine. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the strongest three-song stretchâfrom âStarlessâ to âFodderââwhich are defined by Tidwellâs unnerving, bending milieus and proficient shredding that underpin Lusk-Simoneâs explosive kit work. Noteworthy highlights include Lusk-Simoneâs hard-hitting fills coupled with rapid-fire double bass and swing beats in âFodderâ or the title trackâs memorable and heavy syncopated bridge where Lusk-Simone and Tidwell lock together perfectly before settling back into their respective roles.
But odd production choices unexpectedly hold back Rubidiumâs strength. Despite Tidwellâs memorable and astute riffs, and a high DR score, the production often buries the guitars too far back in the mix. Consequently, this makes Tidwellâs playing feel muted and strips his guitar of its authority. I had to almost max out the mid-range EQ on my headphones to really hear Tidwellâs guitar work on tracks like âBriarsâ and âOtherworldlyââa frustrating outcome thatâs impossible to overlook. At just thirty-two minutes, Rubidium also feels short, a feeling amplified by its closing instrumental, âMoon Bathe.â While the interlude has promising ideas and an interesting exotic flair, itâs over too quickly and feels underdeveloped.
Rubidium left me with a sense of anticipation rather than satisfaction, feeling less like a complete body of work and more like an intriguing blueprint for whatâs to come. Still, when Visitantâs talents alignâas they do on the albumâs strongest tracksâthe result is an unsettling and convincing blend of technicality and raw emotion. Thereâs no shortage of quality performances, and Rubidium has all the ingredients for a gripping album. By further refining their approach and leaning into their more bespoke qualities, Visitant is poised to deliver an album that builds on the considerable promise of this debut.
Rating: Mixed
DR: 9 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Exitus Stratagem Records
Websites: visitant1.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/visitantband
Releases Worldwide: August 22nd, 2025
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