Showing posts with label killswitch engage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label killswitch engage. Show all posts

12.06.2008

Various Artists -- 'Vans Warped Tour 2007' [DVD review]


Vans Warped Tour 2007 [DVD]
Image Entertainment (12/2/08)
Unrated
60 minutes


A year too late, this video compilation of live performances and artist interviews from the 2007 Warped Tour has finally hit shelves, and unfortunately does its best to underwhelm fans.

Sure, there's some good stuff on here, most notably killer performances from punk legends Bad Religion and Pennywise, as well as solid showings from Coheed and Cambria, and Killswitch Engage.

But for all that is good, there’s plenty of filler, with weak offerings from Pepper, Sum 41 and The Starting Line juxtaposed against unmemorable cuts from the likes of Chiodos and Fishbone.

The problem is, this collection really offers nothing more than a taste, featuring a single song from a broad mix of a scant collection from what the tour has to offer. Put aside the question of whether bands like Killswitch Engage or Avenged Sevenfold belong on the tour; the single-song offerings keep the running time to an hour at the expense of giving you anything of substance or even a real handle of what this tour was like. The producers could have doubled the running time to either offer more songs from the same acts, or at the very least more songs from more acts. Sure, a single song from 22 instead of 11 bands is still light on substance, but at least it gives us a bigger collection. For best effect, there probably should have been a single song from the lesser-known acts and then, for bands like Bad Religion, give at least three songs.

Then there's the choice of interview and performance footage. Why offer interviews with Paramore, The Almost or Meg & Dia but then no performance footage from those bands? Paramore is a particular quandary given the band's rise over the past year.

As for the nuts and bolts, the video is offered up in 1:33:1 with a nice Surround audio track, and there are a handful of bonus songs and interviews to be had as bonus footage.

So basically, what you have here is a perfectly suitable extended commercial for Warped Tour. And if the aim was to chronicle the tour's 13th anniversary, well ... see above for all the shortcomings. With over a year to compile and put this thing together, fans deserved a lot more, especially when you look at the superior audio sets the tour has put out over the years.

12.27.2004

Killswitch Engage -- 'The End of Heartache' [review]



Killswitch Engage
"The End of Heartache"
(Roadrunner Records)


Ever since exploding onto the metal scene in 2000 with the release of its self-titled album, Killswitch Engage has proven over and over again it is at the forefront of the latest metal emergence.

With driving guitars, thunderous drum and bass tradeoffs and vocals that ranged from hardcore screams to melodic wails, Killswitch Engage's Roadrunner Records debut, "Alive or Just Breathing," further solidified the group's position.

But just as everything was coming together, vocalist Jesse Leach quit the band. The remaining members -- guitarists Adam Dutkiewicz and Joel Stroezel, bassist Mike D'Antonio and drummer Justin Foley -- pushed forwards, incorporating Blood Has Been Shed front man Howard Jones into the fold.

After over a year of touring, the band, with its new lead singer, settled in to record a follow-up. Even with the new blood, "The End of Heartache" follows the same trademark sound instantly recognizable as Killswitch Engage. Jones' voice is noticeably different at times, but doesn't take away from the foundation laid by the band.

Even with the release of "When Darkness Falls" last fall, Jones' voice immediately stands out on the opening track "A Bid Farewell." He's far more guttural than Leach, but as the song progresses Jones' sound begins to feel more comfortable.

Coming from a hardcore background, Jones has a killer scream and his melodic singing is definitely better than what Leach was offering. The straight-up quasi-hardcore vocals are more abrasive than what the band initially had but, by the time "Take This Oath" comes around, Jones feels like a good fit. The double-bass work and driving guitar riffs are pretty tight, and Dutkiewicz' backing vocals sound better here than anything he's done before.

"When Darkness Falls" first popped up on the "Freddy Vs. Jason" soundtrack last year. It's a nice track to ease Jones into the new line-up, but the driving bridge between the verses and choruses and the chorus itself is the meat of the track. It feels like the verses could have been better, though the urgency displayed towards the end of the track is really good too.

"The Rose of Sharyn" is vintage Killswitch. The driving force of Dutkiewicz' guitar riffs is what propels the song at the beginning, but Jones soon takes over, especially towards the end of the track when the vocals are almost exclusively melodic. It's hard to really pick a standout track on this album, but "Rose" probably just edges out the competition.

"Inhale" is the album's token instrumental, something Killswitch is phenomenal at (there were two such tracks on the band's last release). The band (Dutkiewicz in particular I would assume), are really good at crafting haunting yet beautiful tracks that stand so good on their own there's no need to add lyrics (though it would probably be amazing if they tried).

As with the band's other instrumentals, "Inhale" acts as a lead-in to "Breath Life," one of the album's hardest-hitting tracks. Foley's drumming is intense against D'Antonio's bass riffs during the song's verses. Jones is intense as ever but really does a nice job on the melodic choruses. There's also some great guitar solos during the bridge.

The album's title-track feels like a re-hash of the band's previous offerings and would normally stand out as the disc's low point if it wasn't still so good. It's probably one of the band's more anthem-sounding tracks and the distorted vocals play well off the intricate riffing.

"World Ablaze" has a more old-school feel to it -- start-stop riffing during the verses is similar to something Prong or Helmet would have released years ago. There's actually a lot of tempo changes throughout the song which makes this one of the album's most interesting songs to listen to.

The drumming during the opening of "Wasted Sacrifice" is some of the strongest on the whole release. The song has a nice "chug-a-chug" tempo throughout. The chorus -- "There is no forever, just today. Don't let your sacrifice waste away..." -- really sounds amazing and heartfelt with Jones' vocals. I really wish this was moved to the final slot on the album, but the band saved that spot for "Hope is..." The band seemed to want to go out on a thunderous high note. The song sounds more intense than the others during the verses, but the chorus is a sing-a-long anthem with the rest of the band. Not a bad note to go out on, but "Wasted Sacrifice" seemed more poignant.

"The End of Heartache" is the perfect example of a "can't stop" release: one you start listening and get involved in the music, there never seems a good point to turn it off. Each song bleeds well into the next. The album, as a whole, is super-tight. Even though there are low points on the album, those low-points are still good.

6.18.2004

Seemless -- Self-Titled [review]



Seemless
Self-titled
(Losing Face Records)


Seemless is a band many of you have probably never heard of.

Collectively the band is a faceless entity, but taken in it's parts, much of the band has been part of the elite hardcore/metal scene over the past few years: Vocalist Jesse David Leach, former frontman of Killswitch Engage; Drummer Derek Kerswill, formerly keeping beats with Shadows Fall; Former Medium bassist Kevin Schuler; Guitarist Pete Cortese, founding member of Overcast.

With a line-up solidly anchored in the metal community it would have been easy for Seemless to offer up a brutal release in the vein of any of the member's former bands. But instead, "Seemless" plays out more like an alternative-rock masterpiece right out of the height of the grunge era.

Throughout the band's self-titled debut, hints of early Corrosion of Conformity swim around vocals similar to something from Stone Temple Pilots or Soundgarden -- sounding like the bastard son of grunge and metal.

After a moody two-plus minute instrumental opener, the album tears open with "Something's Got to Give," with thick guitar and bass riffs tumbling over each other to a solid drum and cymbal-filled back beats. As Leach starts singing, it could really catch first-time listeners off-guard -- a mix of Ed Roland (Collective Soul), Weiland ("Core"-era STP) and Cornell (Soundgarden) -- moody, melodic and emotional all at once.

"Something's Got to Give" sets the tempo for the album as the band tears through track after track, each one in a similar vein: an alternating slow-paced or up-tempo, grunge-tinged rock song. The bluesy instrumentation juxtaposed against Leach's restrained vocals creates an interesting dynamic that can easily appeal to a plethora of listeners.

Occasionally the members' history catches up with them, especially Leach as he lets loose with a nice scream here and there. Production-wise, "Seemless" has a nice raw feel to it at times and the band has embraced an old school mentality letting loose with guitar solos from time to time.

The album is solid as a whole, with some great "moments" along the way: "The Wanderer" sounds like a cut off of Corrosion of Conformity's 1994 release "Deliverance"; "Soft Spoken Sanity" has a killer guitar solo to close it out; "Endless" is a great, slow-paced moody ballad in the vein of Alice in Chains with a nice, loud middle portion; Many of the songs have great drum-laden openings.

Seemless has offered up something completely out of left field in this day and age. If this had come out in the mid '90s, it could have been easily overlooked. Yet, with little competition in this specific genre, the band feels like a breath of fresh air. Outside its native New England, I'm not sure how much buzz Seemless has generated so far, but with a national tour looming on the horizon and the band still with a wide-open future ahead of it, the band is sure to come into its own.