#TheMetalDogArticleList
#MetalSucks
MĂL, The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza, and More Among Final ArcTanGent â26 Additions
#TheTonyDanzaTapdanceExtravaganza #MoreAmongFinal #festival #announcement #lineup #MetalSucks #metal #music
#TheMetalDogArticleList
#MetalSucks
MĂL, The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza, and More Among Final ArcTanGent â26 Additions
#TheTonyDanzaTapdanceExtravaganza #MoreAmongFinal #festival #announcement #lineup #MetalSucks #metal #music
Dear Hollowâs Mathcore Madness [Things You Might Have Missed 2024]
By Dear Hollow
The equation above is AMGâs freakishly rigid and completely objective algorithm for scoring albums and determining quality. We incorporate statistics and abstract algebra, which I understand are very complicated maths, in order to get you the highest quality extreme music this side of the Hudson or Atlantic or Yangtze or wherever the hell you are. The trouble is, you bastards donât listen to math (i.e. âhurr durr, Wilderun is so much better than this shit.â).1 So I listen to math because Iâm a contributing citizen and patriot â I listen to mathcore for you. I wade through the cesspools of skronk and sass â RYM and Reddit â for the best of the best. I do it for the, like, three of you who dig it and the, like, eight billion of you who tell teens to turn it off before shuffling back inside for a bowl of Great Grains. What I do is super mathematical so you know itâs super serious. Mathcore is about as unlistenable and scathing as it is a total sellout â so you can offend nearly everyone who hears it. Random rhythms, migraine-inducing tempo shifts, painful squeals, no sense of melody or counting, vocals a la cheese grater to the throat â itâs skronk. So enjoy my bounties, you three. The rest of you can fuck right off.
Commence panic chords!!
Better Lovers // Highly Irresponsible â Last yearâs barnstormer debut EP God Made Me an Animal set one hell of a precedent for Buffaloâs Better Lovers, and their debut full-length does not disappoint. Yes, itâs a revenge album against Keith Buckleyâs lesser rival project Many Eyes, but Highly Irresponsible is soooo much more than petty Every Time I Die drama. Amplifying every facet of their sound, you get more manic barks and charismatic croons from legendary former The Dillinger Escape Plan vocalist Greg Puciato, more chunky riffage from Fit for an Autopsyâs Will Putney, and more of a southern fried good time from three-fifths of the defunct-and-dramatic Every Time I Die.2 While unafraid to embrace hooky rock sensibilities (âDeliver Us from Life,â âAt), the punky, bluesy, and sleazy all-out assaults of tempo-abusing insanity (âA White Horse Covered in Blood,â âLove As An Act of Rebellionâ) collide with fret-squealing riff fests of the highest caliber (âLie Between the Lines,â âFuture Myopiaâ) in an insanely catchy, dynamic, stupid heavy, and stupid fun album with legendary status awaiting.
Frontierer // The Skull Burned Wearing Hell Like a Life Vest As the Night Wept â Look, I get that itâs a thirteen-minute EP released super late 2024, but, câmon, itâs fucking Frontierer. Somehow seeming more punishing than usual across its four tracks, thick-ass slogs hit like sledgehammers to the temple â translating well across its more frantic moments and slower menace â while rhythms attack with the ferocity and doomed inevitability of a swarm of locusts and vocalist Chad Kapper spits blood, vitriol, and insanity into the mic. Channeling the glacial suffocation that coursed through Oxidized, it doesnât matter if the tempo is more upbeat and energetic (âAs the Night Weptâ) or if itâs content sludging in its own muck (âWearing Hellâ), or indulging in both (âThe Skull Burnedâ), the vibrant dissonance swirls in dizzyingly mechanical intensity and the down-tuned riffs smother with ruthless arrhythmic beatdown chugs. While comparable to Ion Dissonance, Car Bomb, and this yearâs Weston Super Maim in emphasis on down-tuned mathcore punishment, Frontierer remains one of the genre frontrunners and trendsetters by a significant margin â in a short thirteen minutes.
The God Awful Truth // All That Dark & All That Cold â Denton, Texasâ The God Awful Truth is likely everything love or hate about mathcore. Dissonance spilling sloppily across its shaky breakdowns, deathcore gut-punches, vocal attacks as insane as the squawking panic chords that paint the background like Jackson Pollock on too much crack, and rhythms jolting about like a toddler on a go-cart. Alongside these traditional The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza-isms (âHail Paimon,â âStreet Ratâ), there is a lighthearted banter guided by vocalist Jordan LaFerneyâs cowboy vocals and resulting poppy rhythms, punky tempos, and loose grind-esque composition (âSymbology,â âSlicked Back,â âBad Toothâ), though the menacing still manages to punch through when least expected (âThe Rainmaker,â âOmelette du Fromageâ). Itâs brutal whiplash of an album, not a semblance of traditional melody to be found, with deathcore breakdowns acting more as the punchline of a song-long joke. Youâll get a headache, but youâll have fun along the way.
meth. / See You Next Tuesday // Asymmetrics â Mathcore and noisecore have a lot in common, namely unlistenable blasting. Your favorite Michigan deathcore/mathcore darlings See You Next Tuesday teams up with Chicago noisemongers meth. for Asymmetrics, more a collaborative experiment than a split. Each band records three songs, then shares only the drum tracks with the other, who records another song over that drum track. Toss in guest spots from The Red Chordâs Guy Kozowyk and Memphis-based sludgecore act Nights Like These, and all elements practically topple under Asymmetricsâ blazing intensity and immense weight. CUNTâs influence in relentless blasters (âThe First Steps of Suffering,â âSyntax Errorâ) and blasting deathcore chug-and-squeal-fests (âBreaking Under the Weight of the Heaviest Burden,â âTomb of Woeâ) collide with meth.âs more ominous slow burns (âSuccumb,â âGuest,â âWilling Participantâ) in a surprisingly well-rounded package, all wrapped up in a tidy â and fuckinâ noisy â twenty-seven minutes. Itâs the best of both worlds!
Utopia // Shame â A breed of technical metal recalling the fretboard-frying abilities of The Human Abstract or Scale the Summit, this UK-based group (including prolific bassist Arran McSporran of Virvum) balances a jazzy warmth and lush atmosphere to balance out the Dillinger rhythmic attack and Psyopus-inspired shredding, made further vicious by vocalist Chris Reeseâs attack of frantic fries, manic shrieks, and ghastly roars. From intense attacks of intensity and brutality (âShame,â âSocial Contractsâ), wonkier exposes of dissonant motifs and jagged rhythms (âNever Argue With an Idiot,â âThe Gift of Failureâ), and lush vistas of warm fretless bass and jazzy chords (âSun Damage,â âZither,â âMoving Gently Towards the Graveâ), the dark themes of shame and morbidity are offset by a truly transcendent atmosphere that ties Shame together into something beyond mathcore.
Missouri Executive Order 44 // Salt Sermon â Absolutely unhinged mathgrind with a religious theme both belying and echoing their LDS missionary aesthetic (short-sleeved white button-ups, ties, shorts, and bicycle helmets) and ominous black masks, anonymous Independence collective Missouri Executive Order 44 approaches a morbid history of religious intolerance with the goal of utter annihilation. Cramming eleven songs into a mere sixteen minutes like blasters Sectioned or Fawn Limbs, you can expect it to hit hard and fast, complete with unhinged mathy meltdowns that spill across the face of concrete rhythm, meatheaded powerviolence chugs (âChristian Pornography,â âThey Built a Bass Pro Shop in Our Zionâ), surprisingly groovy riffs (âThe Unbuckling,â âSeven is a Holy Numberâ), tied together with vocalist Jaromâs cult leader shrieks and sinner wails, alongside wickedly distorted Mormon spoken word and gospel samples. Posing no stance of their own aside from the dethroning of tyranny, Salt Sermon stands with all its tragedy and iconoclasm, both utterly devastating and utterly enticing.
Shiverboard // Hacksaw Morissette â Aside from the silly genius of the album name, New Yorkâs Shiverboard eludes easy definition. Most consistently planted in grind, art-punk, screamo, and mathcore sensibilities, Hacksaw Morissette deals with fifteen tracks that feel like a shotgun blast. Punk is a common thread coursed through this tapestry of asininity, ranging from Sex Pistols-with-animalistic-snarls (âAll Black Snoopy,â âStain Removerâ), complete collapses into noisecore (âCryptic Bismuth,â âChastity Jeansâ), over-the-top deathcore blares (âChainsaw Fruit Punch,â âAngelina Shit Tonâ), math rock and Midwest emo musings straight outta Delta Sleep or American Football (title track, âDrug Test,â âThe Garbage Stork,â âVitamins of Darknessâ), and complete grind and mathcore meltdowns (âIf I Canât Have Love I Want Power,â âTorrential Drencherâ) â thereâs something for everyone aboard Hacksaw Morissette. With just enough dynamic to keep things interesting but not too much experimentation to throw listeners (thanks to the tasteful brevity), Shiverboard could stand to throw some more my way.
Traveller // Broken Home â Sometimes bumping mathcore is just an excuse to include djent, and Germanyâs Traveller falls into this category. Utilizing Erraâs Impulse-era formula, Architectsâ melodic sensibilities, a touch of Northlaneâs ethereal moments, and a DIY grit whose âloud and ouchyâ weight is sure to be divisive. Guided by ferocious roars, sporadic cleans, and âthicc thicclyâ breakdowns galore it often emulates that mid-2000s metalcore that recalls a djentier Feed Her to the Sharks (âNever Cared (2002),â âMismatch,â âLimboâ). Other times, it incorporates a groove and technicality that recalls the shenanigans of last yearâs MouthBreather, making it a curb-stomping affair with an edge of the menacing melodies and ethereal keys (âAcheron,â âOrpheusâ). Traveller is more djent and less mathcore, sure, but (1) youâre getting a lot more with Broken Home and (2) thatâs why itâs at the end of this list.
#2024 #AllThatDarkAllThatCold #AmericanFootball #Architects #BetterLovers #BrokenHome #DeltaSleep #Djent #Erra #EveryTimeIDie #FawnLimbs #FeedHerToTheSharks #FitForAnAutopsy #Frontierer #Grindcore #HacksawMorissette #HardcorePunk #HighlyIrresponsible #ManyEyes #Mathcore #Meth_ #MissouriExecutiveOrder44 #Mouthbreather #NightsLikeThese #Noisecore #Northlane #Psyopus #Punk #SaltSermon #ScaleTheSummit #Screamo #Sectioned #SeeYouNextTuesday #SexPistols #Shame #Shiverboard #TheDillingerEscapePlan #TheGodAwfulTruth #TheHumanAbstract #TheRedChord #TheSkullBurnedWearingHellLikeALifeVestAsTheSkyWept #TheTonyDanzaTapdanceExtravaganza #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed2024 #Traveller #TYMHM #Utopia #Virvum #Wilderun
Weston Super Maim â See You Tomorrow Baby Review
By Dear Hollow
Whatâs so wonderful about Weston Super Maim is that the duo doesnât take itself too seriously. With the style of music they profess, youâd be tempted to expect a Blindfolded and Led to the Woods or Ion Dissonance, maybe leaning a bit towards Aseitas or Dysphoria. Youâd probably be right â technically â but these guys describe their sound as âimagine if Meshuggah couldnât count,â describing a blend of the mathy pioneersâ wonky rhythms, Will Havenâs dissonance, Crowbarâs riffs, Car Bomb and Humanityâs Last Breathâs boundary-pushing technicality. From the successful 2021 EP 180-Degree Murder, they have worsened their sound (their words, not mine) to unleash the olâ razzle dazzle of See You Tomorrow Baby on unsuspecting feet.
Somehow managing to encapsulate the three-fold overlap of mathcore, djent, and dissodeath in the Venn diagram of excess, the international duo (vocalist Seth Detrick from Oregon, the instrumentalist Tom Stevens from London) also tosses in a cyber metal sorta take on atmospherics, with laser sounds and obnoxious effects atop the fray, while Weston Super Maimâs ultimate claim to fame is their absolute apeshit intensity. Chunky riffs, wild electronics, an utter lack of rhythm, and breakdowns galore add to the insanity â a strange dichotomy of unhinged bananas music and solemn and abstract lyrics. Ultimately, See You Tomorrow Baby blessedly hits the sweet spot between listenability, unhinged ridiculousness, and unashamed excess.
This unrelenting assault comprises a blast for the willing to withstand an utter lack of subtlety and dignified rhythm for mathcore intensity with squonky tech and obscene sounds. The opening title track feels straight outta The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza and Ion Dissonanceâs school of thought, with chunky, djenty riffs offering a face full of thick stuffing with stinging dissonant leads and wonky blastbeats, although this insanity truly kicks in with following track âAutistic Kill Trance.â Weston Super Maim does a bang-up job of making deathcore/dissodeath/djent as brutal as possible, then amping it with even more ridiculousness, a trend further shown in âJohnny Menomic,â âBrute Fact,â and the aptly titled âThe Bare Maximumâ in spacy cybermetal effects and other forms of insanity. It features an expert blend of bananas hugeness, catchy earworms, moments that revel in the hugeness, and just enough melody to contrast the huge bite taken out of your left eardrum. There are four guests on See You Tomorrow Baby,1 but for better, the duo creates a bulletproof sound that the contributors do little but inject a jolt of energy. The closer âPerfect Meadows in Every Directionâ offers punishment aplenty but adds a dimension of exploration to its proceedings.
See You Tomorrow Baby is big, dumb fun. The production only adds to its colossal loudness, which makes the more subdued tracks fall by the wayside. âSlow Hellâ and âKryptonite Renegadeâ are the best examples, few riffs dominating and some passages feeling like Frontierer or Psyopus copy-and-paste printer jobs, alongside a general and unwelcome subtlety. While âPerfect Meadows in Every Directionâ does a bang-up job closing the album in its unique fusion of punishing and contemplative, its eight-minute-and-change runtime can make it feel daunting and distant. These are small potatoes, and ultimately add to the dynamic of the album at large, because youâre not here for boundary-pushing music; youâre here to have your skull caved in by a couple of dudes who make big fat metal.
This album has been on repeat for weeks, because it is both tormenting and insanely fun. The dissonant death metal influence is largely an afterthought to Weston Super Maim, but I canât tell if itâs because the sonic palette doesnât focus on it or the duo doesnât take itself seriously enough. Either way, See You Tomorrow Baby leans hard into djenty deathcore/mathcore with megaton riffs and excess coded into every track, with an obnoxious aesthetic that pairs surprisingly nicely with its lyrical abstractness. With just enough melody and breathing room to give further emphasis to the beatdown at its core, its more-than-reasonable forty-minute runtime ensures that, although never overstaying its welcome, youâll get your fair share of punishment. Donât you worry about that.
Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: westonsupermaim.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/westonsupermaim
Releases Worldwide: March 15th, 2024
#2024 #35 #Aseitas #BlindfoldedAndLedToTheWoods #CarBomb #Crowbar #Deathcore #DissonantDeathMetal #Djent #Dysphoria #Frontierer #HumanitySLastBreath #InternationalMetal #IonDissonance #Mar24 #Mathcore #Meshuggah #Psyopus #Review #Reviews #SeeYouTomorrowBaby #SelfRelease #Soreption #TheTonyDanzaTapdanceExtravaganza #WestonSuperMaim #WillHaven
Dear Hollowâs Mathcore Madness [Things You Might Have Missed 2023]
By Dear Hollow
Yâall ready to skronk? Cuz itâs âbout to get skronky. I had a realization about midway this year that all I was doing was contributing mathcore releases to Kenstrocityâs Stuck in the Filter pieces. So instead of painting myself as a one-trick pony who can only do math three times a month, I decided to reveal my cards as a mathcore sellout by the end of 2023. I have been given an incurably bad taste this year, and a spotlight under which I stand alone while commenters and colleagues alike chuck tomatoes and copies of Mercyful Fateâs Dead Again and Saxonâs Rock the Nations at me (saying, and I quote, âget some culture, you selloutâ). See, when the inimitable Kronos left, he took with him the taste for the mathy skronk. I suppose Dolphin Whisperer has some math love built into him, but weâre too busy squabbling over details most of the time.1
Thus, I have compiled a list of some mathcore releases you might, uh, tolerate! Because I have filtered and expressed opinions over acts like See You Next Tuesday, Sleepsculptor, Soulkeeper, and Squid Pisser (Iâm not sure why I picked all mathcore acts that start with S, but here we are) you can go find âem yourself if youâre soooo upset why I didnât include them. Without further ado, letâs get skronky (another S!).
Better Lovers // God Made Me an Animal â Look, I get itâs an EP, but when your band consists of the instrumental section of the defunct Every Time I Die, the guitarist of Fit for an Autopsy and End, and the vocalist of the legendary The Dillinger Escape Plan, we can make some exceptions. Charisma and sleaze drip through the southern-fried leads of these four songs, while Greg Puciatoâs unmistakably charismatic vocals rip across, formidable cleans gracing melodic noodling with a catchiness that contrasts with the dense groove. Speaking of the groove, they hit at just the right moments, recalling I Am Hollywood-era He is Legend in âSacrificial Participant,â while punk speed graces â30 Under 13â with a franticness, while the riff in the title track is absolutely mammoth. Quite the lineup, and while the sound is what youâd largely expect from its ranks, the five-piece makes its debut EP just damn good mathcore.
Chamber // A Love to Kill For â Nashvilleâs Chamber enters the fray with a sound that weaponizes mathcore for maximum punishment, a tad like Frontierer meeting late-era The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza in a knife-fight behind the old Kmart: down-tuned thuggishness, chunky and bruising rhythms, noodly riffs, and squealing leads.2 Vocalist Jacob Lilly offers a vicious performance, his roars and fry vocals dripping with vitriol, while the cutthroat axework collapses and crushes around him, and drummer Taylor Carpenter hits the kit balancing rock-solid anchoring and pure mania. A Love to Kill For is a relentless metalcore attack barbed with hardcore punk, mathcore, and hints of deathcore: carefully calculated, intensely brutish, and worth every concussion Chamber can muster.
Euclid C Finder // The Mirror, My Weapon, I Love You â A balanced affair unafraid of the noisemaking, Baltimoreâs Euclid C Finder (presumably named after the Fallout weapon) releases a grind-tinged math attack of viciousness and oddity in equal measure. Nineteen minutes of wonky rhythms, blasting percussion, manic dissonance, panic chords aplenty, and insane vocals greet the ears with the subtlety of a five-car pileup. It would be easy to dismiss The Mirror⊠as just another Dillingerâ or Convergeâ worshiper, but then the groove hits. The trio balances its treble trouble with a chunky hit of downtuned intensity and gruff barks that gives respite to the million-miles-per-hour of noodly technicality. Itâs a toothy and intense affair that never takes itself too seriously (i.e. âJonathan Davis 10000 BCâ) and never overstays its welcome.
Telos // Delude â What makes Copenhagenâs Telos unique is its blackened and noisy take on mathcore. Or, if you please, a mathy take on blackened hardcore â whatever floats your boat. A bit like if Hexis (with whom they released a split this year) and Botch had a scary-looking baby. Misanthropy oozes from every orifice and hostile noise fills negative space, ominous leads and dissonant plucking wearing haunting grooves into the brain. Tracks like âBastion,â âIâve Been Gone for So Long,â and âAs Atlas Stumbledâ are full-on assaults of intense proportions, while the more subdued ritualism and atmosphere in âI Accept / I Receiveâ and âThroneâ show the depths of Telosâ lurching and rumbling depravity. Fans of mathcore and blackened hardcore would do well to do a headlong dive into this particular abyss.
Thin // Dusk â Mathcore gone grind. Reveling in tight descending patterns of insanity, with a fearlessness of skull-caving death metal, New York Cityâs Thin will beat you senseless with every weapon in its arsenal. A wall of noisy noodling, panic chords, and squalid feedback is erected with every attack, collapsing for death metal-inspired weight and dissonant plucking throughout that feels like homage to this yearâs Asystole. Screamo orientation fuels the fire and brevity is the name of the game, but toss in formidable performances from all forces involved, with howling screeches giving way to gravelly gurgles, groovy riffs giving way to frantic tremolo, and the rhythm section cutting through the darkness. As the cheery acoustic strums of closer âMangroveâ sound in final respite, Thin revels in its sonic and lyrical pairing of nostalgia and trauma â a dark night of the soul.
Dead Soma // Pathos â A more rhythmic and atmospherically spidery but nonetheless viciously punishing take on mathcore. Best described as Loathe covering Converge songs, the sepia-toned and mysterious Deftones influence is unmistakable, but Swedenâs Dead Soma is unafraid to embrace the intensity. Hinting upon djent not unlike countrymen Vildhjarta and weighty rhythms like Car Bomb, the grooves are palpable and punishing, guided by the dead hands of electronic glitches and pinch harmonics and dragged by manic barks and screeches. Chino Moreno-esque whispery cleans and subdued mumbles add to the glitching and warm synthwork in the more laid-back tracks, which add further dynamic to the relentlessly fat riffs and mathy noodling (see: âLife and Limbâ to âError Blemishâ). Warmly atmospheric, it carries a vintage tone by the vocals and synth, but is ultimately uncompromising in its brutality.
MouthBreather // Self-Tape â This one is less mathcore by sound and more by name. The Boston collectiveâs debut LP Iâm Sorry Mr. Salesman (another filter cleaning I contributed to) was Coalesce-meets-Converge-core through and through in a groovy take on mathcore, but after a come-to-metalcore-Jesus moment they go straight for the jugular with a nu-infested, groove-infected -core sound for Self-Tape. The viciousness is front and center, with aggression and fury spewing from every chug and growl, with its storied mathcore history offering its energetic bite. Now featuring more deathcore weight and nu-metal influence to slam into your sorry-ass ears alongside the ghosts of Christmas skronk, Self-Tape reflects a descent into madness through its very reasonable twenty-three minutes of film references. Maybe youâll think itâs just metalcore with no mathcore in sight, and youâd be right, but (a) thatâs why itâs at the end of this piece and (b) your head will be bobbing so hard you wonât care.
#2023 #ALoveToKillFor #AmericanMetal #Asystole #BetterLovers #BlackenedHardcore #Botch #CarBomb #Chamber #Coalesce #Converge #DanishMetal #DeadSoma #Deathcore #Deftones #Delude #Dusk #End #EuclidCFinder #EveryTimeIDie #FitForAnAutopsy #Frontierer #Gideon #GodMadeMeAnAnimal #Grindcore #HardcorePunk #HeIsLegend #Hexis #Loathe #Mathcore #Metalcore #NuMetal #Pathos #SwedishMetal #Telos #TheAcaciaStrain #TheDillingerEscapePlan #TheMirrorMyWeaponILoveYou #TheTonyDanzaTapdanceExtravaganza #Thin #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed2023 #Vildhjarta