Isolation
Disease Of The Nation
- Style
- ADD Metal
- Label
- Self-Financed
- Year
- 2007
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
Killing songs: Total Control & Give Me Your Name
A certain peculiar thing has taken over several metal bands all over the world,
Finland included. This thing is the mishmashing of numerous genres into a melting
pot that makes genre-definition almost impossible. Disease Of The Nation
is just such a group. As the group proclaims on its web page, they take “influences
from pop music to black metal and from traditional heavy to grindcore and hardcore”. The band itself humorously calls the appropriate genre “problem metal“. But do not be fooled, we aren't talking about a complete free-for-all here like, for example, with Between The Buried And Me. To me, there is definite method in this madness.
DotN is a very young band in itself but all the players in
it have years of experience from both demo and recording acts. This is very
apparent from the tightness of their playing as a unit. Isolation is their first
demo and the sound quality is very good for this stage. Almost everything is
in balance; only during slight occasions the bass drum gets buried during the
most manic tempos. Oh, I would have liked just slightly more bass in the mix,
but that’s just quite often me.
The song material is, as mentioned, very varied. The speedy opener Total
Control is my favourite track from the bunch with a furious pace and catchy
guitar riffage to blast the thing into high gears. The slower and more melodic,
steamrolling part in the middle emphasises the speed nicely. Singer/guitarist
Mikko Knuutila has an impressively wide range, although in some areas he has
a lot more work to do then in others. The occasional death grunts are powerful
and the more frequent throaty, black metallish screams are not just insane,
but quite enjoyable. The clean vocals are the weakest point at this stage, as
they could use several handfuls of power and confidence.
My Favourite Emotional State starts off nicely with some tremoloed
riffs and blast beats which lead into some nice thrash beats and off-beat fills.
Drummer Arto Vesander, who has also showed his monstrous capabilities in Chaos
Creation and Devilhorn among others, is at his most
impressive on this track. The short jazzy interlude is a nice touch. As a whole the song has both high and low points, the most so-and-so one here. The title
track aims for a much more moody, doomy and melancholic feeling but the song
feels like a tractor caught in quicksand and unable to go anywhere. Like said,
Knuutila’s clean vocals need some hefty strengthening to deliver these
kinds of atmospheric songs with more conviction. But the music on the track
itself is quite uninteresting as well, save for the interesting use of feedback
and guitar noises.
Fortunately Give Me Your Name closes the disc on a high note. Some
guitar melodies backed by what sounds like a glockenspiel bring a King
Diamond-vibe, although the song itself has very little to do with the
master of thematic NWOBHM-driven metal. Heavier, churning parts are mixed with
a great solo, hardcorish sections and more tortured screaming. Works for me!
All in all, Isolation shows some definite potential on many fronts. The playing
side is definitely ready and once the singer gets the cleans working alongside
the harsher styles, We’ve got one of the most capable voice-abusers of
the Finnish scene right here. Depending on the listener, their song material
is highly versatile or unfocused, but there possibilities are just about limitless.
Keep your eyes and ears opened for this one.
Full songs in full force from MySpace