Think youve heard all the twists Metalcore has to offer as the increasingly-overstuffed genre kicks and screams its way skyward from the underbelly of the do-it-yourself network and into more mainstream outlets? Do you find yourself wondering if theres anything left to contribute to the New Wave Of American Heavy Metal? Well, while the rest of the world was busy chewing all the flesh from the bones of the scream-sing scene's cadaver, The Agony Scene decided to square themselves away, buckle down and reinvent the wheel.
And now theyve emerged with a sharpened musical battle-axe called The Darkest Red, an album poised to crack the contents of each and every spectators skull all over the floor. "We are really, really proud of this album," declares drummer (and co-founding member) Brent Masters. "When we wrote The Darkest Red, we werent taking much of an influence from anybody. We were just writing parts that felt good to us .We put a lot into this record because we were trying to break away from being The Agony Scene that everyone knew."
The bands self-titled debut (produced by Killswitch Engages Adam D.) was filled with promise, but admittedly saw them wearing their Swedish Death Metal and dissonance-soaked hardcore influences on their sleeves. It was a solid start... But with this new album, their first since reforming with a recharged lineup after a rocky breakup, The Agony Scene have fully come into their own. The Darkest Red fuses crusty-punk dissonance, crushingly brutal breakdowns, European metallic-harmony, a bit of melodic singing and pulverizing rhythms like never before. The entire proceedings have been injected with a disharmonic breadth and expansive destruction.
The album's title track captures the fresh energy from the first time Williams, Masters, and longtime guitarist Chris Emmons hit the practice space with new bassist Brian Hodges and new guitarist Steve Kaye after a hiatus that included the birth of Williams' first child. The album's first single, "Prey," is the fruit of the band laboring to perfect their skills, with its adept blend of melody and heavy barrage.
"We've really developed our own sound. We've gotten all musicians together that really click, as far as playing, and our music naturally matured as a result of finding that right combination," Masters says. "It's what I've always thought The Agony Scene should sound like in my mind," he adds. It's a vision that new producer Rob Caggiono was able to bring to light with his emphasis on eliciting top-notch performances. "Rob's a total workaholic and he wouldn't accept anything other than our absolute best," beams Williams.
Heavy metal, sweat-soaked hardcore and punk rock have all enjoyed plenty of contributions from Europe and coastal North America: areas that have produced genre-defining bands, to be sure, but have alternately been burdened by an even larger glut of cannibalizing copycats taking their cues from each other rather than true life experience and inspiration.
"Mike and I have been in bands together since I was thirteen, and growing up where we did, it made our mindset different, our sense of humor, a lot of things," explains Masters. We don't have 'peers' where we come from. There is really no heavy music scene. We write music for ourselves as opposed to latching onto a bandwagon," adds Williams.
Welcome to The Agony Scene. Welcome to the very loud sound of the American Waste.
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said:
perfecto!...=p Aug 29
Jonathan
said:
Dude, I listened to ur guys music and it rocks. Ur one of the inspirations for our upcoming band: "This Time Remembered" Dec 15
hardcoreforlife
said:
when are you guys gonna have a new album i wore out the darkest red like forever ago Sep 07
Used,Tested,AndDestroyed
said:
when r u gonna put some of your songs up???? Jul 27
said:
Hey you guys ROCK! You should put the song Scapegoat on here, what an awesome song. BURN ME ALIVE!!! Rock On \\m/ Jul 20
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