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Sage Francis - Copper Gone (new album streaming via Spin)JBaker and Chaos212' date=' you guys would dig this. Dark, angry, melancholy hip-hop. So far I like it better than anything he's done since Personal Journals.[/quote']That sounds awesome. Will check that out!
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I'm kinda trying to find a strange prog genre that mixes metal with electronica' date=' like EBM, chillstep, trance, DnB, etc. *NOT* industrial-metal like Rammstein though. I found some fun stuff last year and can't for the life of me find it. Any ideas?[/quote'] Ummm...Amaranthe maybe? If you're willing to listen to Halestorm then I can't imagine you'll turn your nose up at them. :mrgreen: Blood Stain Child is sort of the go-to band for this kind of thing but I'm not sure I'd say they're particularly prog and Amaranthe is essentially just the better version of BSC. Ram-Zet's not bad,and Kalisia might work, as could Voyager or perhaps Andromeda. Wingdom's pretty good. Dol Ammad is an interesting Greek group with lots of electronica and choral vocals, a very big grand sound - 'Star Tales' is the album of theirs that I got into. Fallujah is a technical death metal band kind of like Born Of Osiris except not crap. Maybe the band I'd recommend most is Thy Catafalque, they're a very moody Hungarian group with heavy electronica elements.
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'Away' by Korum. Turns out Klone isn't really my thing for the most part. They had a couple of songs I liked, 'Rocket Smoke' being my favorite, but they just had far too many slower songs. However, they did remind me a lot of a somewhat more progressive version of Deftones, so anybody who likes them ought to check out Klone.

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'Rocket Smoke' by Klone.

Ketha - Blob - I finally got some time and a working internet connection. There's some really interesting stuff going on here' date=' Iceni, thanks for the heads up.[/quote'] Oh goody. I recommend Innerty and Klone to you as well - the former's got a lot of dissonance and prog stuff going on, and the latter remind me a lot of Deftones in their sheer passion. Well, a warm glimpse is about as close as I'm ever gunna get to getting laid...
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Bölzer - Aura One of the absolute highlights of an already stellar lineup, these guys get my vote as the best new death metal band around. Original, personal, and dramatic death metal that doesn't really bring anyone else to mind, but still remembers its roots. Fucking killer. Sent from my HTC PH39100 using Tapatalk 2

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    • Whichever tier of thrash metal you consigned Sacred Reich back in the 80's/90's they still had their moments.  "Ignorance" & "Surf Nicaragura" did a great job of establishing the band, whereas "The American Way" just got a little to comfortable and accessible (the title track grates nowadays) for my ears.  A couple more records better left forgotten about and then nothing for twenty three years.  2019 alone has now seen three releases from Phil Rind and co.  A live EP, a split EP with Iron Reagan and now a full length.

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      There's a problem already though (I know, I am such a fucking mood hoover).  I don't like Phil's vocals.  I never had if I am being honest.  The aggression to them seems a little forced even when they are at their best on tracks like 'Manifest Reality'.  When he tries to sing it just feels weak though ('Salvation') and tracks lose real punch.  Give him a riffy number such as 'Killing Machine' and he is fine with the Reich engine (probably a poor choice of phrase) up in sixth gear.  For every thrashy riff there's a fair share of rock edged, local bar act rhythm aplenty too.

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    • Full length number 19 from overkill certainly makes a splash in the energy stakes, I mean there's some modern thrash bands that are a good two decades younger than Overkill who can only hope to achieve the levels of spunk that New Jersey's finest produce here.  That in itself is an achievement, for a band of Overkill's stature and reputation to be able to still sound relevant four decades into their career is no mean feat.  Even in the albums weaker moments it never gets redundant and the energy levels remain high.  There's a real sense of a band in a state of some renewed vigour, helped in no small part by the addition of Jason Bittner on drums.  The former Flotsam & Jetsam skinsman is nothing short of superb throughout "The Wings of War" and seems to have squeezed a little extra out of the rest of his peers.

      The album kicks of with a great build to opening track "Last Man Standing" and for the first 4 tracks of the album the Overkill crew stomp, bash and groove their way to a solid level of consistency.  The lead work is of particular note and Blitz sounds as sneery and scathing as ever.  The album is well produced and mixed too with all parts of the thrash machine audible as the five piece hammer away at your skull with the usual blend of chugging riffs and infectious anthems.  


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