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Beatdown has become more popular in recent years, so bands likeĀ KrueltyĀ have more wiggle room to rep their unique niche in the genre. In line withĀ No ZodiacĀ andĀ Xibalba, this Japanese band owes a lot of their riffage to old school death and doom metal. Their debut LPĀ A Dying TruthĀ is very easy to appreciate on those terms alone. This helpsĀ Kruelty sidestep beatdownās ongoing pitfall of forsaking interesting songs for pure ignorance. Bands like this prove that itās possible to play beatdown with tight songwriting. Primitive violence and tasteful arrangements continue to set them apart on their sophomore full-lengthĀ Untopia. It strikes a compelling balance between unfiltered hardcore and gory death metal without sacrificing on either end.
āUnknown Nightmareā findsĀ KrueltyĀ setting a demonic mood of Sumerian chants and ominous drones. This adds more weight to the entrance of gnarly distortion, and a beat driven by a so-bad-itās-good snare tone.Ā Tatamiās vocal range has certainly taken a step up, now using more shrieks to contrast his low growls, but the songwriting remains deliciously meat-and-potatoes.Ā Maniās drumming gives a distinct punk feel to fast parts, with sparing use of double kick, but also knows when to lock in with guitaristsĀ ZumaĀ andĀ KenĀ for jaw-breaking mosh parts or lay back on someĀ Bolt Thrower-style grooves.Ā Krueltyās devotion to resonant licks and deep atmosphere gives their songwriting more to work with than many of their contemporaries in the heavy hardcore movement.
KrueltyĀ doesnāt start throwing in slammy fight riffs until āHarder Than Before.ā But even then, such a staple of modern beatdown only accounts for 10% of the song. The rest relies on grimy tremolo, jack-hammer thrashings and bull-dozing grooves to compete with the best of throwback death metal, with mint NYHC toughness to keep the mosh pits scary. The point being, āBurn The Systemā isnāt the work of a heavy hardcore band ripping off death metal. These guys know their history, and it shows in their lethal use of time-tested tropes. The hardcore influence manifests more through bestial intensity instead of jarring transitions, leaving room for massive riff changes and natural tempo shifts before dropping into chest-beating breakdowns.
Untopiaās heart of darkness continues to reveal itself through deeper cuts like āMaze Of Suffering,ā asĀ KrueltyĀ nods to concussive, bomb-blasting East Coast brutality, and nasty splatterings of earlyĀ Carcass. And yet, the midsection seamlessly builds to skull-splitting half-time hardcore riffs. Tough guy strut and knuckle dragging chug-a-chug notwithstanding, the first half of the song could easily appeal to fans ofĀ Krueltyās country-menĀ CoffinsĀ in its respect for savage riff-mongering and, yes, catchiness. LikeĀ 200 Stab WoundsĀ andĀ Sanguisugabogg, itās not the progressive flair or technical prowess that makes songs like āManufactured Insanityā satisfying, but how intuitivelyĀ KrueltyĀ incorporates (almost) melo-death passages, or a stomping two-step. This way, the customary decelerated breakdown feels like a legitimate pay-off instead of a crutch.
KrueltyĀ has an uncommon ability to write parts that cross genres without trying too hard. Itās easy to imagine hardcore kids two-stepping during the bouncy intro of āReincarnation,ā or death metallers circle-pitting to the galloping thrash section, but the real bridge building occurs with mid-tempo beefiness and bottom-end abuse. Genre distinctions become irrelevant, asĀ KrueltyĀ clearly doesnāt care about pronouncing āthe spooky doom metal sectionā or āthe part to make you punch your friend in the face.ā They just let the protracted tone worship or battle-ready mosh parts speak for themselves. The bone-rattling sensations could swing in either direction, whether it be ninja moshing or head-banging.
To the bandās credit, they save the albumās hardest beatdown for the final 40 seconds of closing cut āUntopia.āĀ Kruelty doesnātĀ haveĀ to attempt that level of aggression on every track. The song absolutely stands on its bewitching tremolo lines and bottom string abuse, with punk-ish speed and eerie chord progressions added for good measure. The parts that arenāt distilled mosh fodder stay engaging, so that the part everyone would normally be impatiently waiting for comes like a surprise left hook to knock a fool out cold.
KrueltyĀ treats their stylistic combination like a contest to see how much punishment they can derive from each genre they take from. Like the legends of metallic hardcore, they thoughtfully take elements from both ends of the spectrum that best help them serve up a healthy dose of adrenaline. To that effect, these guys continue to set a standard for the Japanese underground withĀ Untopia.
KrueltyāsĀ UntopiaĀ comes out on March 17 and is currentlyĀ available for preorder via Profound Lore Records.
The post Review: Kruelty mines death metal for the best beatdowns with <em>Untopia</em> appeared first on MetalSucks.
MetalSucks – Review: Kruelty mines death metal for the best beatdowns with Untopia
Author: Max Heilman
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March 15, 2023
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