with
Martyr AD - On Earth
As It Is In Hell
by
Trenton Ray
..
Take the rulebook of metalcore, I know
you have it sitting somewhere. You know, that old, worn out book that has
seen better days. Throw it out in the trash. Better yet, cover it in gasoline
and light that mother up and throw it out in a dark alley. Watch it burn
and watch the eyes of the homeless standing around flutter in fear. When
the flames subside, collect the ashes and scatter them around your lawn.
Metalcore as we know it has died.
Fear not, because the beast is rising like
a hellspawn phoenix and its name is Martyr AD. From riffing that would
give a Vietnam vet flashbacks to drumming so intense that once feels that
Thor himself is sending thunder down, this is one disc that does NOT disappoint.
Step back to the days of NYHC, mix in a
good bit of Swedish metal, and simmer to satisfaction baby!
The cd starts off with an intro.. and,
as most intros, it becomes the "pointless track that is thankfully short
because I am too lazy to get off my butt and change the stereo" track.
Thankfully, the album really rips into you with savage ferocity starting
with the first actual track, "Bring Out Your Dead". This track is by far
my favorite, with a sound all its own. Picture God Forbid and At the Gates
having a baby. Now picture the baby being foster parented by equal parts
Johan Liiva era Arch Enemy and Earth Crisis. Vocalist Andy Hart brings
strong lyrics about hatred for those who judge others and the fate which
they deserve. The track features an excellent shout along breakdown, with
Swedish-inspired riffing chugging this steam-driven locomotive of angst
down the road to perfection.
Track 3, "The Serpent and the Flower" is
unrelenting with its fierce viscosity. There is no time to catch your breath
at the first of this song, and the tempo is porn star fast. Another great
example of how breakdowns in hardcore should be.
Next, we come to the track "American Hollow",
which starts with a siren sound and begins to rip into you like a thousand
bullets. Closest thing to a firefight I ever want to be in. The machine-gun
nature of riffing helps to build this mental image. The chorus of "I am
the reason you're always bleeding" even further builds the grim vision
of mind. Come to think of it, the power of this track is less like a massacre
and more like being mauled by Montecore the tiger. It's a beautiful kind
of carnage.
"Late Night Faith" healer is a bit weaker
of a track, but this is Martyr AD weak, so it is still miles ahead of most
hardcore out there.
"Misery Dance" is right up there with "Bring
Out Your Dead" for lyrical strength, yet as most hardcore bands do, they
use the pure energy of the music as a catharsis for an emotional void.
The strongest breakdown of the album comes in the chorus of "If I could
just Play dead forever Maybe I could make sense of this". Hits close to
home with this track.
"Valley of Solitude" reminds me of "Burn
my Eyes" era Machine Head, with a shouted intro leading into perfect headbanging
speed drums. The bitterness is apparent vocally, and the bass work is stronger
than a BalCo client baseball player whose name I wont say.
"The Last Words of Any Meaning" is a 2
part attack on those people whom we uneducated people call "fake motherf***ers".
Fear Factory style drumming, Pantera style intensity, and Immortal style
vocals, however 100 times faster than the great Abbath Doom Occulta could
spit his wonderful bile. I am obviously impressed with the vocals on this
song, because Immortal is one of THE GODS of my musical world.
Around "Beneath the Plague", I began to
feel worn out from the jackhammer brutality of the album, and my hands
were numb from the vibrations. Amazingly, I was not complaining a bit.
The albums intensity could be used as a new energy source. f*** OPEC, we
could attach kinetic neurosensors to every metalhead in the country and
watch them power America with the thrashing moshing and headbanging that
this album produces.
Next to last we have "Into Stone", an unrelenting
ender with Michael Arnott (Candlemass era) riffing and intense constantly
rock crushing vocals deep from the heart.
The disc ends with a reprise of bring out
your dead called "The Dead" The tempo is only a bit slower on this track,
not your typical slow as USPS ender.
At a total running time of 30ish minutes,
this album is the epitome of what hardcore/metalcore should be. Brutal,
Powerful, and Concise. Any longer and I would have been literally drained.
The guitar work is far more innovative than most so called hardcore I have
heard recently; and the guitarists embody a universal technique, touching
on equal parts NYHC, Flordia Death, and Gothenberg Melodic Death Metal.
True connoisseurs of bru-f***ing-tality
5 out of 5, a must have for metalheads
of all types. Keep this album out of the car cd player though, might bust
a steering column trying to drum on the wheel to keep up with things, speeding
without knowing it, or worse!
CD Info and Links
Martyr AD - On Earth As It Is In Hell
Label: Victory
Records
Rating:
Tracks:
Faithless (Pt. II)
Bring Out Your Dead
Serpent And The Flower, The
American Hollow
Late Night Faith Healer
Misery Dance
Valley Of Soltude
The Last Words Of Any Meaning: Diagnosis
/ Terminal
Beneath The Plague
Into Stone
Dead, The - (Reprise)
Untitled - (hidden track) |
Listen
to Samples and Purchase This CD online
|
CD Info and Links
Listen
to Samples and Purchase This CD online
Visit
the official website for more on the band and their new CD!
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