BORNBROKEN – The Years Of Harsh Truths And Little Lies
- by ER
- Posted on 15-05-2018
To be sure, the performance is top notch. Samuel Santiago’s drums are tearing down everything in its path while the Red Voizard’s bass is thick as walls of Jericho, Mike Decker/Simon Savard’s guitars pummeling you into submission so relentlessly you will cry for mommy already after the title track (note: review written on American Mother’s Day), Pepe Peloquin channeling his best Marcus Bischoff/Max Cavalera/Phil Anselmo (Heaven Shall Burn, ex-Sepultura/Soulfly, Pantera, respectively).There’s no ifs, ends or but(t)s (not kicked) about it, this is a flawlessly executed record and you can feel the hard work put into it, with a production that ought to set the new standard in all of metal; thick yet clear, punchy but not car-rap-bass-cringworthy, all of the above sounding really good in my new wooden Symphonized earbuds.
The opener made me smile, as “Empty Souls” utilizes the old gospel classic “The Old Rugged Cross” to the point of “the emblem of suffering and…” as if to emphasize that this Roman instrument of Christ’s death-torture has somehow become a symbol of Christian pride, which would have its most famous victim reeling in disbelief and horror. The band actually quotes and refutes some of the pitches proselytizers use, such as “repent you sinner” (as if Christians were not sinners!) with relentless anti-evangelical fury, double the aggression of the debut and the Slipknot’s “Iowa” nu metal influence. The most notable songwriting efforts come early on, be it the brutally excellent video title track that recalls “Roots” Sepultura and faster Pantera, “Torn” or “The Only One” (a testimony of recovering addicts) citing “Chaos A.D.” Sepultura/Soulfly eponymous debut, wailing wonderworking squealing guitar on top of concrete ultrariffs, a signature feature on the remaining tracks. After that, regardless of the excellent thrash groove of “No Stranger To Failure”, “The Years” plunges in quality, briefly only flashing thrashy brilliance on the Fear Factorily mechanically precise “Live Or Die”, but regaining prowess for “Father Death”, an anti-suicide anthem that sports classic Slayer riffs and a truly moving outro recalling the ballad sections of Pantera songs, and the closer “Listen”, interestingly, the only track that fully recaptures the brilliance of the debut, heavily borrowing from Machine Head’s “Burn My Eyes” thrashy beginnings (my favorite section), to say nothing of the simple yet thought-provoking messages such as “this is my life if you don’t like it there’s something wrong with yours not mine" or "it’s hard to find that someone who deserves the sacrifice", but hardly ending on such an epic note as their debut.