This is Real

codeorange

The recent rise of Code Orange has created a buzz around the band. Some have been surprised by their broadly growing popularity.

Forever just came about three weeks ago. It’s easily their best and most comprehensive album yet. With each album their hypothesized sound sharpens with clarity. I Am King also had underground hype a few years ago but didn’t have the same coherence.

Just start with “Forever” and “Kill the Creator” which absolute slay some VFW hall or club. The arrangements possess carnage making breakdowns and back-beat bass slaps that’ll make anyone puff their chest in the pit. There are also some of these artistic elements introduced before they start playing a bigger role in the album.

Programmed distorted bass intermissions and industrial drum loops interrupt and reconnect parts of songs. Those two tracks are dynamic alone for a single, but Forever stands strong as a whole. Each track has purpose. No song falls into a filler category.

“Real” is the first of those songs that ventures into something outside of hardcore or metal. It loads up heavy for 45 seconds and then silences into a wonderfully industrial break. They use it to progress back into viciousness.

At times it feels like three or four songs in one. It actually works here unlike most artists I hear trying to string more than one song together.

Of all the tracks “Hurt Goes On” annihilates all barriers of genre. This piece of art explores an infinite void. Its lyrics haunts you, inspires an odd toughness, and whatever kind of darkness but not evil you want to describe. It’s an industrial spoken word. The simple but harsh beat can repeat forever and never lose its quiescent intensity.

There’s still songs that are true to CO’s roots. Nothing’s heavier or more metallic than “Spy” on the record. Nothing.

Gratefully there’s a bit of Rebe Myers’ singing too. “Bleeding in the Blur” has this grimy feel to it featuring Myers through out. It’s a pretty rare treat with a song that’s more grunge than hardcore and the kind of song you wouldn’t expect from this kind of ferocious band.

“Dream2” is a black hymn and wraps up Forever in a spiraling silence. If it started destructively, the end was a mum departure. They left the village and went outside the city walls.

It’s clear they executed and transposed from their mind exactly what they wanted.

 

Old Vibrations

It’s good timing for A Day To Remember’s next record. Summer has started and there’s space for someone to make an everlasting impression. Each summer there’s always a record we can look back on years later and define that summer by. Dr. Dre and The Chronic in 1992. Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories in 2013. Name your own summer records. ADTR have an opportunity to forever etch their names into summer. The album title track “Bad Vibrations” opens the new album and brings the intensity fans of old can reminisce in. Early breakdowns and catchy angry verses to feast on. It’s a smart move to announce a new album with a uniquely ADTR song to get everyone excited. Vocalist Jeremy McKinnon utilizes more screaming and half singing than cleaning singing. ADTR’s last few albums have slowly moved away from that style and focused on poppier verses and chorus. It’s not a sign a this new record will return an overwhelming restoration of hardcore centric vocals however “Bad Vibrations” feeds the dogs. New record drops August 19th.