Infected Human Being
Disease Of The Nation
- Style
- ADD Metal
- Label
- Self-released
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
Killing songs: Infected Human Being, Shotgun Between Your Eyes & New Born Depression
On their second demo, Finland's Disease Of The Nation keep up
the fury with their tried mixture of a myriad of styles ranging from hardcore
to death metal and punk to alternative rock. The disc-opening title track starts
off by grinding speakers into oblivion with frantic blasting and then alternating
between hardcore-grooves and a deathier chorus that yearns the presence of the
live stage. The mid-song mosh-section demands respect as well.
Shotgun Between Your Eyes rips it open with a pleasingly complex riff
(not too technical though) and continues as a more thrashy onslaught until around
the chorus section which is littered with bursts of grindcore, groove metal
and…accordion? Yes, accordion. I know, it must sound disjointed but dammit,
it works. And they didn’t even get to the mosh-part and ooooing background
vocals.
The Fist Magnet makes the brave attempt at mixing the most tender
moments on the record with harder-edged alt rock melancholy with the occasional
screams and metallic riffs thrown in and unfortunately beyond a few cool dynamics
and a widdly solo, it doesn’t work for me. Besides the challenge of making
the softer material stick out positively within this style, the song also most
glaringly shows that singer/guitarist Mikko Knuuttila has the longest way to
go with his clean vocals. His high-pitched screams and hoarse shouts are great
but when stripped of the aggression, the voice calls for more power & timber.
It may not actually be what the theme of the song calls for, but I digress.
Fortunately the closing tune of the album, New Born Depression, returns
to form with a furiously thrashing attack that is ideal material for bashing
someone’s face in with the added lead guitar licks, groovy mid-section
and quirky background vocals bringing in pleasing spices.
The furious chops of the band are evident throughout and I must emphasise that
it’s refreshing to listen to a band that is considerably adventurous in
trying out different elements and making it work more often than not while not
going overboard with the melting pot just for the sake of not sounding like
a carbon copy of a distinct band. While I can see many being turned off by certain
elements or others in Disease Of The Nation’s brand of
metal, they have worlds of potential and continued to develop it even better
on their next demo.
Full songs in full force from MySpace