Carrion
Discard
- Style
- Modern, slightly Deathy Thrash Metal
- Label
- Shadow World Records
- Year
- 2007
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Bleeding Lead, Pulse, The True Northern Mindset, Draconian Measures, Circles Of Bonedust, Demonology & Concubine
Friends of heavy duty shooters, take note! Discard, from the
eastern shores of Finland, display the kind of chops and blows on their debut
album that most bands seek through their entire careers. The barest spots of the
Amazon have rarely seen levelling of this kind from such fresh faces.
Classifying the band is a task indeed. The roots are firmly planted in furious
thrash metal, but with a truckload of modern touches. For some sort of reference
album, I guess The Haunted’s debut wouldn’t be
a complete misfire. The pulverizing production that is nearing perfection also
plants the sonics that blast forth from the album firmly into the 21st century.
How orgasmic it is to once in a while hear an album where the bass drum actually
thuds with might instead of watered-down slapping.
Bleeding Lead is a perfect opener for this album. About a half of
a minute spent with building a good riff-burst and BOOM! Strategic knuckles
right into the forehead. Works like beauty! So do the speedy riffmonsters Demonology
and Pulse. A slight melodic death metal flavour abounds, although the
mood is still very thrashy. The rapid punkishness of Fiend, while still
fast and furious, doesn’t grab my nuts with similar intensity for some
reason. Meanwhile, the groovy tightness of The True Northern Mindset
locks into a Pantera-class pulverize-mode to produce great
results. Draconian Measures slays just because of the bass intro alone.
The brutally catchy chorus on Circles Of Bonedust should be killer
when played live. The epic vibes on Concubine are something that really
stick out as a moment on the album and is something that the band will hopefully
explore more boldly in the future as well.
The band plays together insanely well and extra mentions must be made about
drummer Ronkainen, who is a veritable beast with his beats and fills. Vocalist
Miettinen has a strong, harsh bark that is somewhat reminiscent of Lamb
Of God’s Randy Blythe, only a bit more guttural. A semi-regular
guest on a little under half of the songs is Amorphis alpha
male Tomi Joutsen. His grandiose, mountain king-style voice is a perfect contrast
to Miettinen and the mixture of flavours is delightful.
As a non-musical extra mention, I must also commend the band members pics in
the inner sleeve. Japanese artist Hase-san has drawn some killer images of the
guys in the band as soldiers that seem like straight from the set of the latest
Command & Conquer-games, complete with titles like “detonation
expert” and “battlefield command”. I’d say appeals the
most to nerds like myself.
All in all, Carrion is a blistering offering of kick-ass metal that
I can definitely name as the most impressive debut record I have heard all year.
This is definitely a band that can keep the flag of Finnish metal flying on
any continent. Be warned and take cover!