Annihilating the Shades
Malkavian
- Style
- Thrash/Groove Metal
- Label
- Finisterian Dead End
- Year
- 2017
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Resurgence</i>, <i>Ruins</i>
Malkavian's groove-laced thrash metal returns for their sophomore release, Annihilating the Shades.
Taking its sonic inspiration from two genres with larger-than-life predecessors, the album comes off sounding distinct
from albums by any of them, with a fairly seamless meld of the anger of 80s-era thrash with a more modern approach in
the form of more complex drumming and hardcore influences.
This is the style that could, in an alternate reality, have been the logical culmination of mainstream US thrash
metal in the late 90s, if grunge hadn't happened and 80s thrash had taken fresh inspiration from groove metal instead of
softening and going mainstrean. There are Slayer influences at work, particularly in the chunky riffing on the
bottom of the scale and the wild soloing of Resurgence and KBA, but the tortured shriek of Romaric "Riko"
Lamare, especially on the middle portion of Spit Away, puts one more in mind of early-2000s metalcore, especially
considering the slower, more intense breakdowns found occasionally in the songs.
It isn't all furious and high-speed, though the tunes never slow down or succumb to the weaker emotions --
Ruins is about as close as they get to some clean vocals, and even those are filled with despairing rage backed
by two-guitar chugging. The riffing is tight, intricate, and very aggressive, exactly the way thrash should be, but
occasionally includes an eerie atmosphere in its intros that would be nice to see expanded; instead, the band usually
goes straight from there to pure thrashing.
Ultimately, Annihilating the Shades makes for a fresh, original take on thrash without many of the drawbacks
modern thrashers encounter when trying to blaze new trails. Listeners of newer thrash bands such as Suicidal
Angels will probably enjoy it most.
Bandcamp: https://malkavian.bandcamp.com/.