Know this now: the label ‘hardcore’ does not do Terror justice. Scott Vogel is possibly the angriest and liveliest frontman you will ever bear witness to.
His mission, after moving from Buffalo, New York, to find a troupe of like-minded individuals in Los Angeles to form these aptly-named noise merchants, has succeeded. Always The Hard Way is angry from the off and does not want to give an inch. You will not find any solace in this record.
Produced by Zeuss (Hatebreed, Throwdown) the record has some elements of the currently popular metalcore movement, such as intricate guitarwork, rapid-fire drumming and bass-heavy breakdowns, but is obviously much closer to the work of Hatebreed than that of Killswitch Engage.
However, instead of sounding like the next step onward and upward from their last album One With The Underdogs, ATHW is a welcome marked regression back to Terror's roots. Vogel’s vocals are back to being as angry as they were in the band's early material but have, naturally, become stronger and even more effective. The result is some of the best hardcore vocals you will have heard in a long time.
The difficulty with going back to basics with an album is that while you can write and perform the kind of songs you wish you could have five years ago, it does sound slightly old and slightly clichéd. ‘You Can’t Break Me’ and ‘All For Revenge’, for instance are overwhelming in their fist-pumping attitude but you know you’ve heard it all before and that you’ll hear it all again in the not-too-distant future.
The unexpected, minute-long hip-hop interlude from MC Murs and Mr Dibbs, amazingly titled ‘Dibbs And Murs Check In’, breaks up the simple, punishing onslaught of hardcore madness that Terror provide. Despite the stellar performances on the record, there’s just not enough breadth to mark this blinkered aural assault out from the rest of the pack.
chill out!
personally, i can't listen to more than a track of this stuff before feeling nauseous.
why so much anger? where's the joy?
I love & angry punishing music
but this kind of stuff (like Hatebreed and Throwdown etc.) just completely misses the point. Its so shit. All the generic, vague songtitle and lyrics about being a bit annoyed about something or other, the stereotypical hardcore tough-guy stance, the fact that this style of music really has been regurgitated note-for-note for over 20 years and the overpowering whiff of testosterone...majorly retarded.
When's there's bands about like pig destroyer, narcosis, landmine warfare, trencher, sunn0))), army of flying robots (to name but a very few) it makes this kind of stuff look and sound even more simplistic and dumb than it already is.
^This
Terror, Madball et al are awful.
meh...
they serve a purpose, the same way that funky house, trad folk and lots of drum n bass do. People want to hear it, they want to hear 2step songs with breakdowns and gang-chants. Live they are fucking immense and you forget that they arent exactly pushing the boundaries. they have their place, just not in my record collection.
that's a fair point
and i like nothing more than a mosh to some filthy drum n bass.
but sitting at home listening to this stuff? analysing it? listening to the lyrics?
i just can't get my head around it. or my ears for that matter. fair enough for people that take pleasure from it, it's just an alien concept to me.
Hardcore reccomendations...
if you guys who don't really get hardcore, I reccomend bands like: Give up the Ghost/American Nightmare, Bane (although they are fairly inconcsistent), Blacklisted,
And in particular Modern Life is War because they're all intelligent bands with amazing atmosphere (they also all mostly abstain from two-stepping rhythms and breakdowns, GO FIGURE!)
Modern Life is War are incredible though, and in my opinion the best and most accessible Hardcore band out there today. (It's how I got there) Jeffery Eaton's is probably the best frontman in Hardcore (or at least has taken over from Wes Eisold now he's left GUTG for Some Girls) because his lryics are always intelligent, thought provoking and honest. And then when you hear his voice it all comes together, because he has the most passionate (shouted, not screamed) voice in probably all heavy music right now. He is pretty much the key to this band although the bluesey influenced instrumental section is amazing too.
'Witness' (2005, Deathwish) is probably THE perfect hardcore album for me, and I advise you all give it a listen. Just by turning up opener "The Outsiders (Hell is for Heroes part I)" you will understand.
Meh.
I've heard all the hardcore kids say this is a dissapointment, I personally just don't dig Terror.
"Tough-Guy" Hardcore is overall fair boring, and I don't see much more than that with Terror. As the reviewer mentioned though, good live show, except on that night, both Donnybrook and Blacklisted were much better,