The Sorrow - _Origin of the Storm _
(Drakkar, 2009)
by: Charlotte Beskeen (5 out of 10)
Since the likes of Killswitch Engage, Caliban and Shadows Fall are
well and truly past their sell-by date, metalcore has become one of
those subgenres where it is all too easy to get sucked into the
prototype of riff-heavy structures followed by intensely melodic clean
passages. Thus pioneer bands often rely too much on the discordant
shift between the two to fuel their assault. _Origin of the Storm_ is
an album which at times stumbles back to stolid and predictably "Rose
of Sharyn"-esque breakdowns, yet at others welds together pummelling
riffage, bittersweet melody and gargantuan beats quite successfully.
This makes for a highly unreliable listen: one half of the album
slouches lazily into metalcore boredom, the other half lurches
hopefully towards originality, sometimes successfully, sometimes
unsuccessfully. Further marred by an overemphasis on prosaic,
sickly-clean choruses which take huge authority over large chunks of
the album, these have the effect of trivialising the crushing power of
riffage which would otherwise have great potential. Overall, this is
pretty bland and formulaic, but one has to give credit for the
occasional successful attempts at originality, which when they do
occur, are powerful.
(article published 21/4/2009)
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