Torch Runner
Committed To The Ground
Twelve songs in 22 minutes. And two of the songs are a combined 9 minutes of play time. You do the math and this equals grind. Ferocious, venomous grind. North Carolina’s Torch Runner are devastating, and on their debut album, Committed To The Ground, these guys waste no precious seconds in letting the listener attempt to catch their breath.
Like already stated, this is grind, not rocket science, so expect simple yet blistering riffs, blastbeats truncated by d-beats and monotonous vocals that are highly toxic. The production is definitely influenced by the HM-2 styled production that bands such as Trap Them have helped reinvigorate in recent years. In fact, Trap Them is a great point of reference if you were to harvest their most fast and chaotic moments. Toss in some Converge, The Secret and Napalm Death and you’re close to their melting pot of grind, crust and hardcore.
I’ve barely seen mention of these guys, but this is probably one of the most intense albums I’ve heard this year (seriously, 2012, I expected more heart-rate accelerating records! What’s the deal?). It’s visceral and I applaud them for producing an album of such savagery. This year has seen a lot of albums shrug off intensity in favor of artsy-ness or progressive aspirations (big generalization I realize), but just look at Decibel Magazine’s Top 40 records of the year. There are what, MAYBE 4 or 5 albums that I’d call intense in terms of severity. Maybe Torch Runner’s kind of records are flash-in-the-pan and not “year end list” material, but I’ll be damned if volume, speed and vitriol can’t go toe-to-toe with any creative ambition. But I digress…
Torch Runner keep things very simple. In the same way a band like Nails isn’t going to go off on random tangents or divert from a singular focus, Torch Runner craft each song as lesson in extremity. Essentially, there are eight songs, each averaging around 50-60 seconds long, which are broken up by four longer tracks. Those longer tracks are pretty much the same sonically, but delivered with a slower, sludgy approach. The four and a half minute ‘The Holy Are The Broken’ being one of the best of the slower songs, demonstrates that you can still get pummeled even with a slower tempo (and a malevolent vibe only helps to ensure the listeners’ horns are raised). Sure, the band isn’t breaking any new ground, but their sheer power earns them big points. While their songs may not be the most memorable, and they might not appear on year-end lists, they’re definitely filling a vacant space of intensity that for me has been sorely missed in 2012.
[Visit the band's website]
Written by Stacy Buchanan
January 8th, 2013

Comments

  1. Commented by: bast

    Review nailed it: “…they’re definitely filling a vacant space of intensity…” in the extreme core side of things.


  2. Commented by: E. Thomas

    i might have to look into this


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