Posts Tagged ‘Ferret Music’
Posted in Reviews, T on Wednesday, November 19th, 2008
While you might expect yet another clichéd take of breakdown reliant deathcore based on the band name, label and overly dramatic album title, the fact is, once you discover The Plasmarifle hail from arguably the tech metal capital of the world, Montreal, feature former Neuraxis vocalist Maynard Moore and a familiarly tight mastering effort from [...]
Tags: Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Review, Siege of Amida Records, The Plasmarifle
Posted in Reviews, S on Tuesday, November 4th, 2008
Based on the 18-minute burst of a debut ‘full length’ that was Parasite , I didn’t exactly have high expectations for the sophomore album from this Michigan deathcore act. However, once I saw the cover, titles, new producers Dan Kenny and John Cinotta (Suffocation) and the mastering credits of Scott Hull (Pig Destroyer, Agoraphobic Nosebleed), [...]
Tags: 2008, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Review, See You Next Tuesday
Posted in L, Reviews on Monday, September 8th, 2008
Oh dear. As much as I dug the debut from these Massachusetts metalcore lads and as much as I actually like the guys themselves after meeting them and subsequently staying in contact with them, it pains me to write this review.
I knew something was awry when I saw the cover, but I held out hope [...]
Tags: 2008, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Ligeia, Review
Posted in M, Reviews on Tuesday, August 19th, 2008
On the surface, it would appear that Ferret has become the anathema of every indie music fan; that being a capitalistically driven monolith intent on peddling the lowest common denominator drivel and casting it off as music that is ‘innovative,’ ‘vital,’ or that has ‘integrity.’ Fortunately, Ferret, unlike Victory hasn’t descended too far into the [...]
Tags: 2008, Benjamin DeBlasi, Ferret Music, Misery Signals, Review
Posted in K, Reviews on Tuesday, August 19th, 2008
No time like the present.
Whereas some bands spend way too long working on their material and refusing to release it to the outside world until its ready, others, like Arizona’s Knights of the Abyss just lock, load and get right down to it. What’s more astonishing in this case is the massive change in sound. [...]
Tags: 2008, Benjamin DeBlasi, Ferret Music, Knights of the Abyss, Review
Posted in A, Reviews on Sunday, April 20th, 2008
With Siege of Amida losing its crown jewel (Whitechapel) to that all encompassing mega metropolis (Metalblade for those not in the know), it made sense to ensure that their next deathcore monolith was firmly propelled into the consciousness of the metal spheres, and disregard what reception was received, which so far has been positive in [...]
Tags: 2006, Annotations of an Autopsy, Benjamin DeBlasi, Ferret Music, Review, Siege of Amida Records
Posted in P, Reviews on Wednesday, October 17th, 2007
After being chewed up and spit out by the Major Label grinder, metalcore pioneers Poison The Well return to the ‘independent’ scene with their fourth full length album for the far more appropriate Ferret Music. And while the band is still a far cry from their seminal The Opposites of Decemberdebut, their return to the [...]
Tags: 2007, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Poison the Well, Review
Posted in A, Reviews on Sunday, October 7th, 2007
An open letter to all young American Metal bands:
“ I know you like Pantera, but please stop trying to ape them and forsaking your original sound-they are gone, get over it”.
Throwdown, A Perfect Murder, Lamb of God-just to name a few of the acts that seemingly thought being basically a Pantera styled cover band was [...]
Tags: 2007, A Life Once Lost, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Review
Posted in F, Reviews on Sunday, September 23rd, 2007
What’s the deal with that cover art? It leaves one wondering whether Full Blown Chaos now desire to be Manowar because with those lions, that ominous Conan clone poised in his throne, it instils that fear…and the record hasn’t even been placed in the CD player yet.
Fortunately ‘Fire Fight,’ firmly quashes any fears of the [...]
Tags: 2007, Benjamin DeBlasi, Ferret Music, Full Blown Chaos, Review
Posted in M, Reviews on Friday, September 7th, 2007
Age certainly, no, definitely hasn’t mellowed Madball, this, their sixth full length hits as hard as any of their back catalogue and sounds just as vibrant and hungry as they did when Set It Off, dropped in 94. Now Madball being Madball, there are zero surprises to be found here, no whinging clean vocals, no [...]
Tags: 2007, Benjamin DeBlasi, Ferret Music, Madball, Review
Posted in M, Reviews on Sunday, May 20th, 2007
Whereas The Showdown (in my opinion) whiffed mightily on their recent attempt at Southern tinged hardcore, the second effort from former Underoath singer Dallas Taylor and his cronies is, much like their self titled debut, an perfectly executed example of incest, trailer park and whiskey fueled hardcore.
Quite a few bands are injecting Southern elements into [...]
Tags: 2007, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Maylene, Review
Posted in H, Reviews on Monday, April 23rd, 2007
Older metal fans might assume that nearly every band that hails from in and around the Bay Area would be at least slightly influenced by the early thrash of Metallica, Testament, Exodus, and the like. This is true, at least, for the near-teenaged wonders of San Jose’s Heavy Heavy Low Low. Why, in this world [...]
Tags: 2007, Chris Ayers, Ferret Music, Heavy Heavy Low Low, Review
Posted in Reviews, S on Tuesday, March 20th, 2007
Here’s one quick question for you to determine if you should continued reading this review or click elsewhere:
Do you like The Number Twelve Looks Like You?If you answered no, go read another review. Right now. If you answered “yes” and especially enjoyed the bands debut EP Put On Your Rosy Red Glasses. Then read on.
Michigan’s [...]
Tags: 2007, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Review, See You Next Tuesday
Posted in M, Reviews on Thursday, September 7th, 2006
Of all the big metalcore releases this year, the sophomore album from Misery Signals was arguably my most anticipated, however with the superb, similarly styled debut from Rosesdead basically stealing some of this bands thunder, I was wondering how Mirrors would stack up in the melodic, layered and emotional metalcore sweepstakes. It stacks up just [...]
Tags: 2006, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Misery Signals, Review
Posted in Reviews, X on Wednesday, February 8th, 2006
Furious straight edge hardcore from Ft. Lauderdale on tap here, and while it’s rife with tired hardcore cliches and structures, it?s one of the better and most conviction filled efforts I’ve heard.
There’s not much to explain here: 14 angry breakdown laden anthems of societal/political disgust (”Tight Lipped Politics”), straight edge pride (”Let’s Get Free”) and [...]
Tags: 2006, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Review, xBISHOPx
Posted in Features, Interviews, L on Tuesday, March 29th, 2005
So far this year one of my very favorite albums has been the debut album from Ligeia, Your Ghost as a Gift. And while most roll their eyes at the very mention of metalcore, the Ken Susi produced effort does everything right. So when given a chance to see the Massachuset’s youngsters on their current tour with From A Second Story Window, Dead to Fall and Ed Gein, I made the trip to the Creepy Crawl in downtown St. Louis to brave my first ‘metalcore’ show and interview with the bright eyed and youthful group of kids in their tour bus…
Tags: Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, interview, Ligeia
Posted in Reviews, Z on Tuesday, July 13th, 2004
The Funeral of God proposes that God has died leaving us to live completely upon free will. Some may not like Zao’s sound but many agree; they are influential and forward thinking with every release. Zao are a band constantly in a state of change. Just in the last two years so much has happened [...]
Tags: 2004, Ferret Music, Review, Thomas Williams, Zao
Posted in M, Reviews on Friday, June 4th, 2004
Melodic metalcore has grown exponentially over the last few years, but it has also been plagiarized exponentially also, with countless Poison The Well clones poring from Orange County and the East coast.
One such band was the short lived 7 Angels 7 Plagues, who had a solid offering with Jhazmyne’s Lullabye. I tell you this because [...]
Tags: 2004, Erik Thomas, Ferret Music, Misery Signals, Review