I
try not to obsess over traffic statistics for this site even though I
am a numbers junkie, caused by years of playing Strat-O-Matic Baseball
with my father and perusing obscure career stats from New York Mets
bench players. That being said, I can’t help but notice that my
readership in Canada is lower than my readership in Germany, despite the
fact that I’ve covered bands across the great North while I’ve yet to
review a German release. Enter Montreal’s Beyond Creation, who I’m
relying on to make my Canadian readership EXPLODE and make me as popular
as maple syrup, or whatever stereotypical treat my ignorant American
ass relates to Canada.
Beyond Creation’s new album from Season of Mist, The Aura,
is a fresh pulse of time-warping progressive death metal that should
probably be traded person to person through a media format that hasn’t
been invented yet, like transferrable brain chips or spinal download
disks, which slide between vertebrae and fuse music directly with your
neural system. Beyond Creation’s brand of next century’s technical death
displays virtuosity without distracting from the songs, allowing ample
room for exploration while the structures keep each track contained in
its own definite universe. The music on The Aura
is elastic and borderline aquatic in nature, swimming naturally from
extra-terrestrial djent to finger-blurring death metal riffing to what I
like to call “progressive space jams.” No, they do not feature the most
dynamic basketball players of the 90s and WB cartoons, but they do have
passages of radar-pinging guitars and a bass tone that sounds like the
bellow of some intergalactic worm-whale while
resourceful drumming slyly twists beneath. But these are only brief
escapes from Beyond Creation’s sinister pummel and mathematic trickery,
brought to life through vastly impressive performances from the entire
band. From Dominic 'Forest' Lapointe’s nimble bass work (which calls
forth memories of Roger Patterson’s best work in Atheist) to Simon
Girard’s on-point vocal attack to the Kevin ChartrĂ©/Girard tag-team
guitar assault, this is top notch progressive death metal executed with
spit, sweat, and whatever fluid will replace blood a thousand years in
the future.
The
only song that felt uninspired was “Omnipresent,” which shifts from
mid-tempo chugging to a bastardized “Snakes For the Divine” riff. This
is the only song that doesn’t hold up under multiple listens, as The Aura
rips through uncharted territory by achieving oxymoronic herky-jerky
groove. Considering how many tempo shifts alter the path of each song
the catchy nature of the music is, as Wallace Shawn would say,
inconceivable. The instrumental track “Chromatic Horizon” rampages
beautifully in my headphones while the title track manipulates my brain
into head nodding motions, growing more violent as the song progresses.
The album's centerpiece, “The Deported,” winds through outer space like one of
those intergalactic worm-whales I mentioned earlier, surprisingly
elusive for such a powerful beast. It’s rare to find death metal so
cunning, so difficult to trap into a corner and identify before it bites
your throat out.
Decibel
Magazine revealed that Beyond Creation will be playing several dates of
the magazine’s tour, opening for the three-headed killing machine that
will be Cannibal Corpse, Napalm Death, and Immolation. If you’re able to
catch them on the May 21st - June 2nd leg of the tour DO IT. I need you
to report to me if they’re actually playing instruments light-beamed
here from a distant planet populated with tentacled metalheads, because
considering some of the rhythms and sounds on this album, that’s about
all that makes sense.
The Aura releases in the United States on May 14th. Order this madness here: http://e-shop.season-of-mist.com/en/items/beyond-creation/the-aura/cd/34199
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