Turmoil
Pain Confessor
- Style
- Melodic Thrash Metal
- Label
- Megamania
- Year
- 2004
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: All Of Them, but my favorites at the moment are Fiery Thorns, Poor Man Crown, Underworld, Waste Of Good Suffering, Soul Eraser & Just Names Remain
The victory roll of Finnish metal in 2004 that has been blasting my ears just
keeps on coming with more and more ammo. Pain Confessor is a
relatively new band in the Finnish scene although several of its members have
been cutting their skills in local underground bands for years. The bands mix
of old school speed/thrash a lá Testament and touches
of more modern death-tinged thrashers like At The Gates, mashed
with some grandiose keyboards makes up for one damn nice combination.
Singer Make has some excellent harsh pipes throwing both aggressive grunts
and screams for the majority of the album and every so often switching to a
clean voice in the more melodic choruses. Guitar solos are used sparingly and
not too often to avoid wearing the listener down with excessive noodling. The
emphasis is on the crushing riffing, that is strengthened by the top notch-production
and brutally accurate drumming of Mikko L. that should give any double-bass
afficionado some goosebumps. The keyboards are strictly in an atmospheric role
here, not soloing in any of the songs but simply adding some majestic melodies
that are a nice touch.
The package of tunes is frighteningly even-matched, as no weak moments abound
from this disc. It also turns on the disc a bit, as the even material doesn’t
present any absolute classic killers that stand out above the rest. For everyone
craving fast, speed metal-drenched cuts, look no further than the opener Fiery
Thorns, Erased Of Empathy or Underworld. More melodic mid-paced
grindouts are thrown by the tons in Poor Mans Crown, Soul Eraser
and Instinct To Resist. Or want some grooving pit-destroyers?
Just whip out Lake Of Regret or Just Names Remain and you’ve
got a shitstorm full of hair, legs, elbows, sweat, blood and possibly teeth.
Simply put, Turmoil is an extremely mature and impressive album from
this new-coming band, definitely among the best debut albums Ive heard this
year. A group to be watched very closely in the future, without a doubt. Seldom has a newer band mixed extremely brutal and melodic elements together this seamlessly. Even
though the band doesn’t have a foreign distro deal yet, anyone who became
interested can check the bands website for clips or the online store www.cdon.com
for some quick purchases. I doubt any fan of quality metal would be disappointed.