Showing posts with label Periphery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Periphery. Show all posts

22 May 2015

VEIL OF MAYA BECOME ENDLESSLY PREDICTABLE WITH MATRIARCH

Veil of Maya Matriach

I spent quite a long time trying to come up with a deep opinion on the new album, Matriarch, by American Progressive Deathcore outfit Veil of Maya, but after repeated listens and chances I come back to one word to describe just over 30 minutes of music that I can barely remember.

Apathy.

A previous Veil of Maya album, The Modern Man’s Collapse, still makes it into my listening rotation semi-regularly. The lukewarm reaction that Matriarch elicits is not based on a previous, under-running, bias against the Sumerian Records veterans, but that, in 2015, Veil of Maya seem to have nothing more to offer. It is not to say that Veil of Maya were necessarily the architects of Progressive Deathcore, but at one point at least, their sound was new and exciting; the riffs were not just the same riffs heard from other bands… even if their songs had tablature akin to a spilt tin of spaghetti hoops at times. Matriarch, conversely, relies heavily on the trappings of its genre and successfully takes the Progress out of Progressive Deathcore.

Veil of Maya have not lost their technical ability or their penchant for writing decent riffs, at least not completely, but they have fallen into a pit of predictability. It’s conflicting to hear an enjoyable riff, only to have it followed by 3 minutes of everything you’ve come to expect; zoning out completely until the next vaguely interesting bit. This album ticks every box so that it can satisfy the modern definition of its genre and little more. The result is a record listened to with clipboard in hand; the listener just waiting to be able to check the boxes marked “overly syncopated Start-Stop riff written in an obtuse time signature” and “random breakdown that completely ruins the flow.” It is likely you have heard this album before, just with a different names and titles attached and (only slightly) different album art. It’s been released many times before (even by Veil of Maya themselves.)

The only thing that has changed this time around are the vocals. New vocalist Lukas Magyar took over from Brandon Butler in 2014, introducing, controversially, clean vocals to Veil of Maya for the first time. These clean vocals are another nail in the coffin for Matriarch, but not because clean vocals are inherently bad or *insert homophobic slur here* or that Magyar’s performance is anything to complain about. The issue is that sections where Lukas Magyar’s clean vocals come to the forefront underline the complete lack of creativity to be found on this album. This is mainly because these sections all sound lifted from Periphery’s Periphery II: This Time It’s Personal release from 2012. On a first listen I had to double check to make sure that Spencer “Sponce” Sotelo wasn’t a featured artist on this album. It’s a definite bad move for your album to remind me of another, better, album that I could be listening to. Because if I can. I will. And I’m sure I’m not the only one.

If the idea of another album that throws electronics, unsatisfying time signature changes and Morse code (probably delivering messages to undercover sleeper cells) disguised as chugging guitar riffs at you is somehow appealing, then Matriarch is for you. For everyone else, there is a vaguely enjoyable album here, but it’s one you’ve probably already heard. One that follows a very specific formula that, to be fair to Veil of Maya, the band follows very well. It’s just a shame that the formula is no longer just written on the blackboard at the front of the Progcore classroom, but etched there like some kind of commandment of the genre; giving those who look on it with the knowledge of tedious predictability.


2.5/5

27 April 2015

SIKTH ANNOUNCE CROWD FUNDED COMEBACK


UK Tech Metal Godfathers SiKth are considered by many to be the true blueprint to modern Progressive Metal... or Djent if you're so inclined. Yes, the Guitar Tone in Djent is pure Meshuggah, but bands like Periphery and similar owe their riffing styles almost entirely to this Southern England outfit. Don't believe me? Just listen:



Anyway, history lesson aside SiKth last released new music back in 2006 with the stellar Death Of a Dead Day and following a live return at Download Festival last year the group have announced their first new release in almost 10 years... and you can be part of it.

Ladies and gentleman we have two huge pieces of news for you today.For the first time since 2006's Death Of The Dead...
Posted by SikTh (official) on Monday, 27 April 2015

As with all Pledge Campaigns, there is a plethora of goodies that you can get your mitts on should you so desire (and you should, you should desire so hard) and even a UK tour coming up later in the year! Does this mean SiKth are back for good? Well, I guess we'll just have to wait and see.

8 January 2015

KORN DRUMMER DOESN'T LIKE PIRACY


Ray Luzier, drummer with Nu-Metal Icons KoRn, isn't happy. Ray Luzier, ladies and gentlemen, isn't happy with music fans pirating KoRn records.

The drummer claims that modern fans don’t see downloading as stealing, nor seemingly value music on a monetary level:

The thing is, with the newer generation, the kids don't really understand that it's taking or stealing. They're, like, 'What? I'm at your freakin' show.' And I'm, like, 'Yeah. But our record's ten bucks.
The “I go to shows” view, while founded on the good intentions of giving money direct to bands not to record labels, has been debated  many a time already. As long ago as 2010, Shay Blay of middle-of-the-road metalcore band Oh, Sleeper, broke down live costs to show that there isn't much money in touring because there’s more to a live show than the band. If nothing else buying CDs shows booking agents that band can pull a crowd and so they get bigger shows, as Misha Mansoor states in this interview from Guitar Messenger (and also points out that even as recently as 2012 Periphery weren't making all that much money.) It’s like any job. Your CV shows what you've achieved and what you can bring to the table... or in this case how many people you can bring to a show. Buying merch doesn't seem to help much either. Most Record companies take cuts of Merch sales these days because no one is buying music any more, Sumerian Records being one of the few companies who don’t. Basically making money in music is hard no matter how you look at it. That’s why some people don’t bother trying to monetise it.

There is another, more personal, side to these complaints. As Luzier continues:

…we work hard on our records, man. We don't sit in the studio and waste time. It's, like, you pour your heart and soul and your blood and all this stuff into this recording
To Luzier it seems the willingness to pay for music is a sign of respect for that artists work. I guess you could liken it to doing a sweet backflip through a ring of fire and no one caring. You took a lot of time and effort into learning how to do a sweet backflip and you damn well want the recognition for doing it.

On the flip side to Luzier’s point there are many artists who will happily give away their music for free and there are lots of good reasons for wanting to do this. Perhaps they would rather people come to shows and buy merch, though most bands who do this are smaller and tend not to need to pay back huge Record Company loans. I say all power to them, I think it’s a really cool thing to do (If nothing else it gives me a weekly article to put out.)

As far back as Lars Ulrich’s campaign against Napster, bands have been struggling with income losses from bits and bytes damaging physical album sales. This is nothing new and the Metallica drummer’s unpopular crusade didn't exactly stem the tides. Luzier seems to realise this, saying:

But, whatever. We're not gonna stop it. It's technology. I get it. I'm just saying, to the fans out there, if you really love your art and people you support, go buy the freaking record. How hard is it?
Ultimately he makes a solid, if defeatist, point. Support the bands you love. I think most people would agree.

As a side note I doubt KoRn are being effecting too badly. I'm sure the bands upcoming tour with Slipknot will pay a few bills and indeed the Drummer seems to imply as such:

…there's people flocking to [our] shows. We're not going anywhere
I’m sure such news will infuriate some and sooth others.


[Quotes courtesy of Blabbermouth.net]

17 December 2014

SUMERIAN RECORDS SIGN CHON


I was very tempted to title this article something along the lines of

SUMERIAN USE DEM COREDOLLA$$$ TO SIGN MORE PROG

Or

ASKING ALEXANDRIA T SHIRT SALES FUND WANKFEST FUN
didn't... but the second one was especially tempting.

Anyway, CHON yesterday made this statement:

'We are insanely stoked to announce that we've joined Sumerian Records!! We have cooked up some incredible things for 2015 and beyond. Look out for our debut album to be released early 2015'
The singing of San Diego’s CHON should come as a surprise to very few people. Sumerian Record’s roster is equal parts highly profitable, teen friendly, pop acts like Dayshell and wizard level prog nerds like Animals As Leaders. CHON are obviously not a pop act, but they are full on Dungeon Master Progressive Jazz Rock... or something. 

Before this deal CHON were a solely internet famous group, popular on forums and youtube. If that sentence gives you deja-vu, it was meant to. Now-label mates Periphery started in a similar position and perhaps Sumerian hope to replicate that transference of success. 

If the name CHON is completely new to you, then why not check out the announcement video and their last release, Whoohoo!, below?







CHON's debut release on Sumerian Records is due Spring 2015