Artikel
MARTYRDÖD
Paranoia
CD
It's a sign of how happily jumbled the sonic universe is in the 21st century when an album on Southern Lord could almost be a kissing cousin to Fucked Up's David Comes to Life -- not that the Swedish group Martyrdöd need to take any particular cues from that Canadian band, given their decade-long existence by the time they released Paranoia in 2012. But for all the tags of crustpunk and hardcore the group has received, there's something directly impassioned in the delivery of ... Full Description Martyrdöd's lead vocalist, Mikael Kjellman, that aims at the same sort of impact one can hear in many acts for whom rabble-rousing anthems are a starting point for all kinds of musical approaches. When the opening "Nog Är Nog" kicks in, the combination of what could almost be old-school 1980s power/thrash metal and Kjellman's distinctly non-black/death metal rasp is an invigorating wallop as much as a crushing statement. The album's general feeling follows in this vein, simultaneously straightforward and quietly exploratory. Sometimes it's down to bursts of brief but thrilling solos cascading over the main arrangements, as on the excellent "Köttberg," while elsewhere the brief spoken word bit on "Hör VÀrldens Rop" acts as an off-kilter contrast to an amazing rip of a chorus. Ultimately, the fact that every song sounds individually great while never taking away from the overall flow of the entire album -- hitting a sweet spot of huge chunky riffs and vocal impact -- is the key to Paranoia's success.
Paranoia
CD
13,50 Euro
in den Warenkorb
in den Warenkorb
It's a sign of how happily jumbled the sonic universe is in the 21st century when an album on Southern Lord could almost be a kissing cousin to Fucked Up's David Comes to Life -- not that the Swedish group Martyrdöd need to take any particular cues from that Canadian band, given their decade-long existence by the time they released Paranoia in 2012. But for all the tags of crustpunk and hardcore the group has received, there's something directly impassioned in the delivery of ... Full Description Martyrdöd's lead vocalist, Mikael Kjellman, that aims at the same sort of impact one can hear in many acts for whom rabble-rousing anthems are a starting point for all kinds of musical approaches. When the opening "Nog Är Nog" kicks in, the combination of what could almost be old-school 1980s power/thrash metal and Kjellman's distinctly non-black/death metal rasp is an invigorating wallop as much as a crushing statement. The album's general feeling follows in this vein, simultaneously straightforward and quietly exploratory. Sometimes it's down to bursts of brief but thrilling solos cascading over the main arrangements, as on the excellent "Köttberg," while elsewhere the brief spoken word bit on "Hör VÀrldens Rop" acts as an off-kilter contrast to an amazing rip of a chorus. Ultimately, the fact that every song sounds individually great while never taking away from the overall flow of the entire album -- hitting a sweet spot of huge chunky riffs and vocal impact -- is the key to Paranoia's success.