September 3, 2012

Bloodbeast - Bloodlust review

Upon my first listen of Bloodlust, the debut album from Pretoria death/groove metal band Bloodbeast, I felt like I was listening to the aural equivalent of being slowly squashed beneath a rock. This is a good thing in my book! Bloodbeast is a young band made up of South African metal veterans. The lineup includes members from the well-regarded bands Architecture of Agression, Bile of Man, as well as Fuck the Corpses.



Visceral Birth, a track made up of only strange sounds, begins Bloodlust. Out For Blood then arrives to squash the listener into pulp. Both the chorus and the clean riffs are earworms. The vocals sound menacing, yet they are intelligible, which is something I don't hear often. Sinister bass and crunchy rhythm guitar riffs add to the might of this track. Headbang-inducing grooves appear in parts of Merciless. A blistering solo features in this track. The lead guitar work on this album strikes a balance between simplicity and musical embellishment, as well as having a no-nonsense sensibility about it. On the war-themed Sadeye SNAFU, the guitar solo adds to the unstable atmosphere. As on Butcher for pleasure, the solos are clean, which helps to balance out the heaviness of the other insturments. The solo on Fuck or die also adds to the atmosphere of the song, with its haunting tone.

I found the latter song to be the most visceral and disturbing track on the album. If a band can create a song that makes me feel an almost tangible emotion, even if that emotion is negative, then I consider the song to be good. Fuck or die is about rape, and written from the rapist's point of view. This chilling content made me want to hide inside for the rest of the year. The music video for this song opens with a terrible statistic - that a female born in South Africa is more likely to be raped than learn to read. The great riffs and aforementioned haunting guitar solo add to the song's quality.

'Old school' is a good description for the sound of Bloodlust. The production reminds me of bands such as Death and Obituary. The crunchy, pressing sound fits perfectly on the album, and adds to the songs without sounding muffled. Bloodbeast bring the groove to most of the album; I can imagine that these songs would induce a good deal of headbanging when played live. Bloodlust is a thoroughly enjoyable concrete slab of brutal death metal, a subgenre which can stray into unpleasantness if a band tries to be 'brutal' for the sake of it. Bloodbeast avoid this, and strikes a great balance between melody and brutality.

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