Between The Buried And Me - Alaska review
Band: | Between The Buried And Me |
Album: | Alaska |
Style: | Progressive metalcore |
Release date: | September 06, 2005 |
Guest review by: | flightoficarus |
01. All Bodies
02. Alaska
03. Croakies And Boatshoes
04. Selkies: The Endless Obsession
05. Breathe In, Breathe Out
06. Roboturner
07. Backwards Marathon
08. Medicine Wheel
09. The Primer
10. Autodidact
11. Laser Speed
After a somewhat lukewarm reaction to The Silent Circus, Between The Buried And Me stepped into the studio with a vengeance, not to mention Victory's increased marketing on programs like Headbanger's Ball. Alaska represents a band still experimenting with various alternative and extreme sounds. What more could you expect from a metal group that takes their name from a Counting Crows song? However, this album takes all previous elements and greatly cranks up focus on the bigger picture. Chaos is distinctly more ordered and instrumental tracks like wispy "Medicine Wheel" and jazzy "Laser Speed" flow much more seamlessly with the violence.
Despite being an obvious choice, "Selkies: The Endless Obsession" works well as a short illustration of the album with its unique progressions, aggressive riffs, and stunningly beautiful outro solos. "Backwards Marathon" would also suffice. The first half beats your face repeatedly into the ground with death vocals, while the soothing second half carries your bloodied body to the creek and cleans your wounds. Plenty of groovy bass lines, lovely clean vocal hooks, and effects-laden guitar work. Of course, it wouldn't be BTBAM without the need to put in a few more bruises before the song reaches its conclusion.
I hate using the word "epic" to describe music as it has become so over-saturated and meaningless. Yet, in the case of Alaska, I have few better words to describe some of the crescendos on this album. The way that the synthesizers compliment the masterful guitar scale runs and 3:4 time signature on "The Primer" is breathtaking; and it is not alone. The ups and downs on Alaska often rival albums from the melodeath-inspired folk genre like Ensiferum and Equilibrium for energy, musicianship, and calls for blood.
As much as I still appreciate BTBAM's new material, I feel that more hostile-sounding tracks like "Roboturner" are a thing of the past. With the promise of a distinctly cleaner, prog-rock sounding Coma Ecliptic on the horizon at the time of this writing, it is nice to have great early albums like this to fall back on for a bit more punch. It is a union of progression and aggression that few manage so well.
That having been said, it is great that Between The Buried And Me have managed to create a signature sound while still delivering markedly different albums each time around. Their compositional chops would only grow with my personal favorite, Colors, while expeditions to the further reaches of time and space would find them in strange new territories with The Great Misdirect and The Parallax. What Enslaved is to black metal, BTBAM is to metalcore. Cheers to growth and middle fingers to convention.
Rating breakdown
Performance: | 9 |
Songwriting: | 9 |
Originality: | 9 |
Production: | 9 |
Written by flightoficarus | 04.05.2015
Guest review disclaimer:
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.
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