A Perfect Ending Legendado BR 14 UPDATED
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This album is a grind-and-roll grind. Huge, noisy, relentless, and with _maybe_ a little more focus on melody than its predecessors. That would be okay if the approach wasn't so ramshackle and disjointed. The longer you listen to Chupacabras, the clearer it becomes that this band doesn't have a clue how to make good music.
This is a beast of a release, a blistering hardcore-punk mashup. Dopey, playful, and catchy at the same time, this flattening of the chord structure in the chorus of A Thousand Suns shows some shade of the early New Bomb Turks vibes.
It's not as instantly catchy as that, but it's a far superior effort. The vocals are nigh unintelligible (endearing!), and the melodies are ill-defined and almost imperceptible. The rest of the band is powerful and dirty, but it's nice when the lead singer gets to deliver a brief, high-pitched melody.
This is an effort from a band that has been around since 2004. The recordings are already out of date, and the singing is drastically worse than on the previous albums. The music itself is pretty passé sounding - mid-set four-minute assault metal with drum fills that drag out to fifteen minutes. The most memorable parts were Secrets and Psychic Drain, two songs that could have been at the very beginning of the band.
A college freshman band that's literally only gotten together in the last ten years? Well...listen to their lyrics, and enjoy their sincerity. If people are blowing out chances for new bands to forge the same magic a half-decade later, these dudes should definitely be in the running. d2c66b5586