Static Dress - Rouge Carpet Disaster review
Band: | Static Dress |
Album: | Rouge Carpet Disaster |
Style: | Post-hardcore, Metalcore |
Release date: | May 18, 2022 |
A review by: | omne metallum |
01. Fleahouse
02. Sweet.
03. Push Rope
04. Attempt 8
05. Courtney, Just Relax
06. Di-sinTer [feat. King Yosef]
07. Such.A.Shame
08. ...Maybe!!?
09. Lye Solution
10. Unexplainabletitlesleavingyouwonderingwhy (Welcome In)
11. Marisol
12. Cubicle Dialogue
All dressed up and nowhere to go...
…is how the state of post-hardcore looks in 2022, a genre that has long needed a dose of fresh blood, as yesterday's heroes lack the exuberance youth affords a band. Like a spring being released after years of tension, Static Dress produce a cathartic and vital release unto a music scene still trying to find its feet after years of Covid-enforced hibernation.
Blasting out the gate with tracks like "Push Rope", Static Dress show that there are phoenixes rising from the flames of the scorched Earth that the past two years have been. Rouge Carpet Disaster is the shot in the arm the music scene needs from a younger, hungry band, one that is burning brighter than their brethren on tracks like "Di-sinTer" and "Fleahouse", which should see the band draw in new fans like moths to flame, thanks to the band's Britpop, grungy, emo-tinged post-hardcore.
Led by Appleyard, the band are a tight-knit group who click together and play to each other’s strengths. The riffs produced by Contrast (no really, that is the guitarist's stage name) on tracks like “Fleahouse” are catchy yet subdued, fitting well next to Appleyard to create a Deftones-esque track that carries all the hallmarks of grunge without sounding backwards-facing.
Producer Erik Bickerstaffe of UK alt act Loathe proves to be a wise appointment for the band. Ably balancing all the different elements of the band's sound while maintaining the charm of each part allows tracks like "such.a.shame" and "...Maybe!!?" to hit the heights that they do. The band is heavy enough to entice metalheads, yet won't scare off those who only dabble at the fringes of the genre. This balancing act is one that the band maintain throughout the album; even on softer tracks like “Marisol” the band are still able to capture that underlying menace and charm that makes Rouge Carpet Disaster the great album that it is.
As enjoyable as the album is however, there are moments when the lack of a truly anthemic chorus hinders the album. Given the band's emo roots, it is odd that they don't dig deeper into their influences to concoct and produce the type of track that will have live audiences screaming their lungs out; for all its shortcomings, it is one thing the emo scene was perhaps best at producing. While the band are able to stitch together strong verses and riffs, the one missing thread is something that you cannot help but notice.
Rouge Carpet Disaster is one of those rare moments when the stars align and you get a varied yet cohesive-sounding album that is full of quality. It is perhaps the most vital-sounding debut album since the pandemic and one that is necessary for a genre that has been in dire need of a new band to carry the flag forward.
Rating breakdown
Performance: | 8 |
Songwriting: | 7 |
Originality: | 7 |
Production: | 8 |
| Written on 09.07.2022 by Just because I don't care doesn't mean I'm not listening. |
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