Technics Win Again - 4-5
Metal now has become dominated with many a silly name that is easily laughable at. Septic Trauma is one band I did (admitting) laugh at with the substandard name which is generically supposed to strike fear into the unexpected, along with the 3 tracks upon the Subservience EP which gives little or no breath between songs. But heavily built upon extremely impressive guitar work similar to the likes of Protest the Hero and the same brutality from thelikes of Killswitch Engage – Septic Trauma pack enough punch to make this one hell of an EP.
Everything begins “Dajjal”, that is just basically a swirling cocktail of belting drums, sweeping guitars and belting vocals that will happily smash its way through your speakers with something that will gladly punish a live music venue for those openly mad enough from this near 6 minute spectacular. Sadly, the madness is derailed during “Elongated Cylindrical Mass” that relies rather heavily on the sweeping and technical approach on the
guitars, which leaves a dry tone of the bass and the insanely played drums. However, not to fear with the return of the energetic fire fight of the title track of “Subservience” that throws itself down a path otherwise known as awesomeness with frantic drumming, extreme guitar playing and vocals that belt away as though the apocolypse was coming.
The technical quintet hailing from Cornwall may rely on the foundations of the Death Metal genre to keep their fans alive, breathing with rage and eager to jump into a mosh pit – but releasing an EP that is slathered in brutal riffs is guaranteed to be one way to grab in the fans.
Everything begins “Dajjal”, that is just basically a swirling cocktail of belting drums, sweeping guitars and belting vocals that will happily smash its way through your speakers with something that will gladly punish a live music venue for those openly mad enough from this near 6 minute spectacular. Sadly, the madness is derailed during “Elongated Cylindrical Mass” that relies rather heavily on the sweeping and technical approach on the
guitars, which leaves a dry tone of the bass and the insanely played drums. However, not to fear with the return of the energetic fire fight of the title track of “Subservience” that throws itself down a path otherwise known as awesomeness with frantic drumming, extreme guitar playing and vocals that belt away as though the apocolypse was coming.
The technical quintet hailing from Cornwall may rely on the foundations of the Death Metal genre to keep their fans alive, breathing with rage and eager to jump into a mosh pit – but releasing an EP that is slathered in brutal riffs is guaranteed to be one way to grab in the fans.