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đŸŽ” System of A Down - B.Y.O.B.

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Prison Song (System Of A Down Cover), by Cruelty Circuit

track by Cruelty Circuit

Cruelty Circuit
Ana – Motivated by Death Review By Andy-War-Hall

So, what’s happening here is Australian symphonic metalers Ana and their debut record, Motivated by Death are set on pioneering a new sub-sub-genre. “Couture metal.” For the blue-jeans-and-band-tees wearers among us, couture fashion is all about expressive, customized statements in clothing, often expensive and always personalized. This is an evident visual influence for Ana, and musically the band cites their style as “a sophisticated, upscale evolution of the craft that prioritizes high-fashion theatricality alongside punishing sonic precision.” Fewer corsets, more spandex. One thing’s for sure, Ana have bought into themselves: they have a series of comics in the works written in tandem with their music,1 as well as a documentary film titled Watch Me as I Rise.2 But what about Motivated by Death? Their album, for their music band? Does it live up to the hoo-ha, or is Ana’s rising star a premature liftoff?

Ana are banking on the power of Y2K nostalgia on Motivated by Death. Early-aughts goth, symphonic, and nĂŒ metals comprise the core of Ana’s sound, with choruses sounding like Nightwish taking on Evanescence and Evanescence taking on Powerman 5000. Guitarist Josh Mak’s riffs shift between metalcore chugs, nĂŒ/alt-rock power chords, and gallops while drummer Andres Osorio and bassist Cody Lamb keep Motivated by Death consistently groovy and moving. There’s a smörgĂ„sbord of synth sounds at keyboardist Mark Shi’s disposal, and when shredding alongside Mak Ana have a surprising knack for showy solos (“Shadow of Life,” “Papa”). Vocalist Anna Hristenko is, predictably, the crux of Ana’s sound, layering Motivated by Death with sultry, classically-inspired but pop-informed bars. She brings gravity to Ana along with unquestionable showmanship, and when Motivated by Death is kicking it recalls not only this millennium’s early rock/metal scene but a time when pop music was more audacious and bombastic.

But Motivated by Death often feels too overly calculated for its own good. Ana make sure to hit all of the beats of a radio hit on Motivated by Death. There’s the booming opener with “Hate Me” followed by the cyber goth panache of “Shadow of Life,” its one-two punch showing listeners that they got both the riffs and hooks they crave. There are two ballads, one power in “You Loved Me More than I Loved Myself” and one Evanescence’s “My Immortal” in “Sick Love” so radio has a choice in what they want play to death. Ana even outsourced a closer by covering System of a Down’s “Aerials,” safely assuring Motivated by Death ends well (in theory). What makes this mathematical approach especially jarring is that Motivated by Death is a very short album, barely hitting thirty-five minutes. Ana just fly through the motions, the listener’s every emotion carefully road-mapped along the way. Motivated by Death feels like a proof-of-concept for Ana, not their debut.

Motivated by Death is also just messy. Ana’s core symphonic sound is imbued with so many Y2K-era rock stylings that there’s hardly enough time spent on one thing to figure out what Motivated by Death is. Its diversity works against memorability; “Eyes of a Child” features a sitar riff in its bridge, and Hristenko breaks out her operatic chops on “Papa,” and yet I forget these things even happen every time. Hristenko is a powerful singer, but clumsy phrasings in the verses of “Sick Love” and “Aerials” leave them feeling awkward, while her declaration of “Listen up you motha fuckeeeeeers!” in “Following the Wind” isn’t aggressive or cheeky enough to land convincingly. Motivated by Death is not helped by Ana’s insistence on loudness and its radio-made production that makes the drums sound like plastic cans and robs any of the dynamics songs like “You Loved Me More than I Loved Myself” and “Aerials” need.3 Motivated by Death sounds like Ana were throwing things at the wall and seeing what stuck. Not enough stuck, and what did doesn’t work too well together.

I fear that Motivated by Death isn’t the statement Ana were hoping for. Ana are a talented, driven bunch, and there’s no doubt there’s a market for what they do. It’s not all bad—”Shadow of Life” slaps and “Sick Love” can be pretty moving at times4—but both playing it safe and half-baking your album is a bad combo. Despite its truncated runtime Motivated by Death proves a slog to get through. I could see a world where I stick up for Ana, one where they’re more bold-faced and adventurous, and I’m getting wedgied for liking “couture metal.” Right now, that’s not this one.

Rating: Bad
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps MP3
Label: Eclipse Records
Websites: anaband.com.au | facebook.com/ana.band.0fficial
Releases Worldwide: May 29th, 2026

Show 4 footnotes

  • Funnily enough, just like Psyclops and their album I reviewed not long ago. Ana didn’t send me a link to theirs and I’m taking that personally. It looks cool, though! ↩
  • Which I can’t find anywhere. ↩
  • It’s taken a great effort from myself to not spend half of this review complaining about the “Aerials” cover. It feels like one of those YouTube “EPIC Orchestral” remixes I can’t stand. Omitting the vocal harmonies in the chorus, putting plastic drum fills all over it, and making the ending climactic misses what makes “Aerials” marvelous. However, it’s still not the worst cover out there. ↩
  • The line “No, I don’t believe in God, but still I want to pray” rings sincere, man. ↩
  • #15 #2026 #AltMetal #Ana #AustralianMetal #Evanescence #May26 #MotivatedByDeath #Nightwish #Powerman5000 #Psyclops #Review #Reviews #SymphonicMetal #SystemOfADown

    A #cover by #SystemOfADown of a new-wave song from the 80's (Metro by Berlin)

    I like it when a cover sounds distinct enough from the original without removing it's essence, and I think this is an example of it.

    I find that the "fuck you for loving me" in the last chorus is a fitting translation of the original lyrics to a more #punk / #metal style.

    @music

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4JGmpnqyHc

    #TuneTuesday #music #MusicRecommendation #SOAD

    System Of A Down - Metro (HQ)

    YouTube
    Der Open Air Park in DĂŒsseldorf steht kurz vor der Eröffnung: Bald spielt hier System of a Down

    Lange geplant: Der Open Air Park in DĂŒsseldorf steht vor seinem ersten Großereignis. "System of a Down" kommt im Juli.

    đŸ‡ș🇩 #NowPlaying on #BBC6Music's #ChrisHawkins System of a Down: đŸŽ” Chop Suey #6music #SystemofaDown ▶ đŸȘ„ Automagic 🔊 show đŸ“» playlist on Spotify ▶ Song/Cover on Bandcamp:

    System of a Down - Chop Suey! ...
    The Beeb 6's Chris Hawkins

    Playlist · ohrenweide · 2002 items · 28 saves

    Spotify

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    đŸŽ” System of A Down - Chop Suey!

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    Monolord – Neverending Review By Creeping Ivy

    I always thought Monolord could level up by favoring hooky bangers. So too did Roquentin, who, in evaluating Vénir back in 2015, saw in these long-form Sabbathians the potential for memorable songs. In picking up Monolord reviewing duties, Huck N Roll began charting a consistently Good stoner/doom career that flirted with evolution but consistently maintained a tried-and-true formula. I would have added the adjectival modifier to Your Time to Shine (2021)—its five distinctive tracks strike a Very Good balance of droniness and catchiness across a sensible 39 minutes.1 My revisionism notwithstanding, Monolord has come to embody the AMG Good, with four branches now on the beloved 3.0tree. As the third Monolord reviewer, the odds suggest I will slap another 3.0 on Neverending and call it a day, especially if album six continues to innovate only around the edges.

    Fortunately, Monolord agrees that hooky bangers would reinvigorate Monolord. To help sculpt what they describe as ‘more succinct and immediate songs’ and a ‘sharper album,’ the band enlisted the legendary Sylvia Massy to record, produce, and mix Neverending.2 Monolord credit Massy for significantly influencing their editing, but this isn’t to say she radically altered the band’s stoner/doom sound. Sonically, Massy beefs up the already thick n’ fuzzy tones of this Swedish power trio. Indeed, the guitar of Thomas JĂ€ger and bass of Mika HĂ€kki continue to combine for some of the fattest, tastiest riffage in the game, with a signature chromaticism hard to achieve in the genre.3 As on prior records, JĂ€ger’s vocals sit back in the mix, making his mid-to-upper range croon ethereally prominent. The metronomic drums of Esben Willems also sit back, making every crash, fill, and cowbell monumental. Like previous outings, Neverending sounds invitingly warm, with some welcome heft this time around.

    Under Massy’s guidance, Neverending shakes up the Monolord formula for the first time. Whereas previous records are 5–6 tracks with an average song-length of 8 minutes, 5 of 8 tracks here sit between 3–5 minutes. Exemplifying this new approach is the opening one-two punch of “Iodine,”—which feels like a miniature YOB meets the noise-groove of Killdozer—and “You Bastard,”—the album’s strongest Minilord song. The latter propels an infectious verse-chorus cycle, supplemented by shimmying shakers, with a Riff o’ the Year candidate. Later, “The Masque” and “Invisible” hit the spot; the former has a fun blues stomp and delightfully dark verses, but the song would’ve benefitted from three iterations of its (terrific) chorus. Minilord falters, however, on “Crystal Bridge,” which actually feels too short. Excellent CoC-style sludgery gives way to JĂ€ger alone, laying plaintive vocals atop clean chords. It seems to set up something expansive, but once the sludge riffing returns as a capper, “Crystal Bridge” ends up sounding like a song without a chorus.

    Despite their emphasis on succinctness, Monolord lace ‘classic’ longer jams throughout Neverending. ”Oozing Wound” is the darling in this regard, typifying the winning chemistry JĂ€ger, HĂ€kki, and Willems possess when they lock in on a simple riff and give it enough space, turns, and melodic character to make it interesting yet still hypnotic. On “It’s Neverending,” JĂ€ger vocally collaborates with Jörgen Sandström, the former bassist of Entombed, which gives Monolord its first flavoring of death-doom via Sandström’s growls. Though I’m less enthusiastic about the Sandström-led portions, the song’s gentle, melancholic dĂ©nouement makes it an exceptional eponymous closer. Speaking of closers, “Inside a Collider” weirdly feels like one at track three. It drones on a hooky riff/vocal combo for a while, but it also contains a killer doom descent I wish happened more than once.

    After careful analysis, I have arrived at the same score Monolord has been achieving at AMG for over a decade. In 2019, Huck described No Comfort as the band’s transition album, which was true at the time. But as it currently stands, Neverending is Monolord’s transition album, and it’s a transition not without its growing pains. Though the songwriting falters more than it should on a ‘sharp’ album, holistically, Neverending is an enjoyable 43 minutes, making it a more-than-worthy branch on the 3.0tree.4 In the promo materials, HĂ€kki shares that the collaboration with Massy ‘makes [him] curious about what the next chapter will be’ for Monolord. I count myself among the curious—Neverending isn’t the fully-realized version of Minilord I was hoping for, but it plants the seed.

    Rating: 3.0/5.0
    DR
    : N/A | Format Reviewed: Stream
    Label: Relapse Records
    Websites: Official | Instagram | Facebook
    Releases Worldwide: May 29th, 2026

    #2026 #30 #BlackSabbath #CorrosionOfConformity #DoomMetal #Entombed #JohnnyCash #Killdozer #May26 #Monolord #Neverending #RelapseRecords #Review #Reviews #StonerMetal #SwedishMetal #SystemOfADown #Tool #YOB
    🎾🇩đŸ‡Č ÂĄSigue en pie! El concierto de System of a Down en ErevĂĄn se pospone por motivos logĂ­sticos, pero Serj Tankian promete nueva fecha pronto. Tras la confusiĂłn electoral, el Gobierno armenio y SOAD confirman que negocian los detalles para el esperado regreso de la banda a ErevĂĄn. đŸ„ #armenia #concierto #erevĂĄn #musica #NikolPashinyan #PlazaDeLaRepĂșblica #rock #SerjTankian #soad #SystemOfADown #ZhannaAndreasyan https://soyarmenio.com/system-of-a-down-concierto-erevan-pospuesto/
    La banda System of a Down y el Gobierno de Armenia reprograman su esperado concierto en ErevĂĄn - SoyArmenio - Noticias de Armenia -

    El concierto de System of a Down en ErevĂĄn se pospone: el Gobierno de Armenia y Serj Tankian buscan una nueva fecha por problemas logĂ­sticos

    SoyArmenio - Noticias de Armenia -