Showing posts with label neuraxis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neuraxis. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Neuraxis - Asylon (2011)

Neuraxis have honed themselves towards perfection in numerous categories through their 17 year existence, not the least of which is in the production of their albums. Asylon, the band's 6th full length album is even more terse, cohesive and forceful than its predecessor The Thin Line Between, which was packed with interesting grooves that acted upon the listener's conscience like the sterile hypnosis of machinery in some test laboratory, with you as the subject. Asylon paints in broader strokes than that 2008 effort, returning to some of the more brutal impetus that characterizes Canadian death metal, but they have maintained enough of the mechanical regimen that it plays out with a well-oiled, fluid consistency.

Of course, the pristine polish of the album is likely to turn off those who have a loathe on for all death metal modern, technical and interesting, but then, they would be unlikely to check out a Neuraxis album in the first place. Those who covet the sounds of Beneath the Massacre, Origin, Despised Icon, Cryptopsy, and the entire host of modern Californian death metal bands will probably find a lot to appreciate here, especially where the album carves out the most variation, like the narrative shifts of "Trauma"; the unforgiving hostility of a "Savior and Destroyer"; and the uncanny, warm twists of melody imparted in "Asylum". The leads are all cautiously wrought, and the band do an impressive job of avoiding monotony despite the fact that they could blast and wank all year long and never even feel a tiring in their joints.

All said and done, I did not find Asylon to be quite as mesmeric as its direct predecessor. The blunt delivery of Alex LeBlanc by this point has worn a little thin with me. His vocal chops are more than suitable to any band in this style, but they're rarely inventive in phrasing, a mere cypher of bludgeoning force with no murderous intent behind the eyes. There are some good pieces here, like "Asylum", "By the Flesh", and the manic thrashing of "V" which I've been repeatedly visiting, but as a whole I found myself too able to skip some of the ballast. The band is wise to offer some breaks in the action later on the track list ("Resilience" and the calm that marks a portion of "Purity"), but these points are not quite curious of their own accord. This is sleek, modern, and well rehearsed fare which makes a good enough account of itself, and surely would offer a few thrills to the tech death purist in favor of high production standards, but its not imbued with the breath of ages.

Verdict: Win [7.5/10]

http://neuraxis.org/php/

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Neuraxis - The Thin Line Between (2008)


Prior to this, I would have counted Truth Beyond... as my favorite album from these Canadians. Trilateral Progression was a good effort and a new, cleaner direction, but The Thin Line Between takes that and truly capitalizes on the style. Groovy, mathematical death metal with a lot of punch and quality riffing.

Few death metal albums can pull off a mix this high quality, a great balance of tones with only one flaw (the bass seems low if you aren't listening closely). But the guitars sound amazing here, as they throttle you with the unique riffing of opener "Darkness Prevails" or the dynamic grooving chug of "Wicked". "Versus" has a unique, almost jazzy intro. But what all the songs have in common is this central, technical mid paced groove. It's almost a unifier, as if this were all one song (even though the groove differs across its tracks). There are a few acoustic bits, such as the nice lulling instrumental "Standing Despite" or the intro to "The All and the Nothing".

This is a pretty catchy album, loaded with excellent guitar work and just enough memorable melody without calling it 'melodic death'. Progressive death metal fans will truly enjoy it, especially fans of Death, Cynic, Obliveon and the like. A killer release for Neuraxis and in my opinion their strongest yet.

Verdict: Win [8/10]

http://www.neuraxis.org/