Whilst, to the uninitiated, Every Time I Die might just seem to be another generic emo/hardcore/whatever band, the reality is that over the past decade they’ve carved out a niche so unique that they’re already providing the musical inspiration for many fledgling acts.
With this, their fourth album, they blow a new hole in the side of the good ship metalcore. The Big Dirty is exactly what it says it is. It’s dirty, it’s big and it’s… the. This record could be everything you need from the aggressive side of the musical spectrum this year, next year, and for the foreseeable future.
While their first two offerings were raw and inspired and infused throughout with the glorious lyrics penned by word-magician Keith Buckley, they are worlds apart from the dynamism and intelligence found in both this and previous album Gutter Phenomenon.
While their third effort found a new direction, with Buckley’s vocals taking a more refined angle, it appears he didn’t manage to harness the full power of his new capabilities. So often on this record his rasping holler doesn’t seem to want to stop, and once you take the time to appreciate the stories he tells, appreciating the style he tells them in and the vital musical backdrop that he’s got backing him up, you won’t want him to stop either.
‘Rebel Without Applause’ has seconds where his gruff tones peel out your speakers with no respite and hollers aside, he sings every other word. It might not be what your mother calls ‘singing’, but how many things do you and your mother agree on? There are notes and accents just the same as the finest opera, but Buckley carries it all off with his gravely curse of a voice.
Musically speaking, ETID are undisputed kings of their genre. They’re kings that got tired of their land being populated by dullards and copycats, so they created a new country. Melding southern rock rhythms with furious metal and hardcore, they will groove your socks off, rock your bed knobs off, and scream your gobs off.
They’re prone to interestingly spazzy moments where you’ll immediately think Blood Brothers!, but soon after there will be a hip new breakdown to nod your head to and sway your aching hips with. Just like they added the respectively smooth and warbling sounds of Gerard Way and Daryl Palumbo to their last record, The Big Dirty sees a cameo from the new flavour as Dallas Green lends his syrupy timbre to proceedings.
It fits beautifully. As does every other change in tempo and style on this album. You’ll struggle to find another record as beautifully balanced as this and, as we’ve seen with the English football team, it’s all about balance.
Just like Refused, ETID could well be one of those bands which bubbles under the surface for their whole career but is lauded and appreciated much more widely upon their demise.
Due to them being largely unappreciated during their musical lifetime everyone will claim to have seen them play some toilet or other on the release of their first EP back in the last century. It never happened.
Hot Damn! was fantastic
but this and the previous album have just washed over me. Keith Buckley is a very clever lyricist though...
I know the strippers real name!
.
glad this is garnering a bit of recognition
typical DiS fashionista toss-bags immediately dismiss bands like everytime i die as just more 'emo' but as this review shows, they are absolutely fucking devastating
people
still care about this band? jesus.
^ how predictable!
i'm liking this record a lot, altho i'm not so sure about the comparisons to refused and the 'not appreciated in their own time' stuff.
i'd say they're one of the most solid bands in their genre. great riffs, great lyrics. altho half the time i can't really tell what they're on about!
if their next london date
is at Wembley or the O2...
I'll eat my words. My words are attached to my feet. Which will probably be at the Astoria.
they'll get popular
now they've compromised with boring southern-rock.
probably
but I've been majorly disenfranchised with this band, we go in different directions now.
Talk about taking your time Raz!
I agree though. In fact, this is my favourite album of theirs yet. More killer 'actual songs' than they've ever put in one place. Although where people get any idea that this band might be slightest bit emo from i don't know!
http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID=10953275&blogID=310858968&Mytoken=3FADE601-AD9D-4F1F-90964A7A62AAC8828967339
Actually
I listened to The Burial Plot Bidding War the other day and it is SO good (never saw it live though, I'll admit that now). But I love this album, greatly improves on what they started on Gutter Phenomenon. Nothing will ever beat Hot Damn! though I'm afraid.