Sindrome - _Severe Damage of Reason and Equilibrium_
(Independent, 2003)
by: Pedro Azevedo (7 out of 10)
Newcomers Sindrome clearly take their music very seriously, at least
judging by this EP: complex structures and arrangements form the basis
of their musical creations, although from a technical perspective
things never get really flashy. Sindrome's subtle complexity stems
from an apparent yearning to create music that has plenty to offer
beyond the first few listens, and that is something they have already
achieved to a considerable extent on this debut EP. Indeed, Sindrome
sit pretty high on the evolutionary ladder already, with a sense of
musical layering that is not initially obvious. Sindrome's closest
musical reference is possibly Tool, a band I am not overly familiar
with; either way, the sprawling, atmospheric compositions are
certainly far from being chorus-based or very metallic. The song
structures remain mostly interesting, but the music tends to feel like
it could use some more intensity. The glowing exception is provided by
the instrumental closing track: a superb, tranquil piano dirge with
some vague background noise that requires no intensity whatsoever. The
vocals are generally very melodic, often effect-laden to the point of
coming across as vaguely synthetic (a couple of times even slightly
reminiscent of Cynic), and merge very well with the guitar work.
_Severe Damage of Reason and Equilibrium_ is certainly an interesting
debut EP which, though somewhat lacking in intensity, shows plenty of
potential for Sindrome.
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