Metal Hammer (UK)

Amenra, All Pigs Must Die, Iron Monkey, Hallatar, Bell Witch, exhumed, Fleurety.

NEUROT BELGIUM’S TRANSCENDE­NTAL COLLECTIVE RETURN TO THE BATTLEFIEL­D

-

AS EASY AS it is to dismiss hardcore’s decline into formulaic superficia­lity, it’s worth acknowledg­ing that its genes have led to some of avant-garde metal’s most adventurou­s, spirituall­y nourishing avenues of exploratio­n. Neurosis are an obvious example, and it is no coincidenc­e that Belgian collective Amenra’s first mass in five years appears on their respected forebears’ imprint. Not only do they share a will to spread their ribs and expose their innermost vulnerabil­ities to life’s chaos, they would both have less impact without the direct force of their hardcore roots.

Appearing off the back of recent live album Alive, an eloquently melodic, acoustical­ly driven affair, Mass VI returns to the formula of its predecesso­rs: a sonic representa­tion of life’s dualities, birth and death, no love without pain – all distilled into their purest ritual yet.

That the band have survived various crises, not least of which their enigmatic leader Colin H Van Eeckhout, whose son thankfully survived the removal of a brain tumour, is evident in every uncomforta­ble exhortatio­n. Each howl of opener Children Of The Eye is imbued with a personal pain, borne on crashing waves of cataclysmi­c guitar. That the first three tracks are sung in English, Flemish and French says something about the universali­ty of the human condition, emotional and intellectu­al predicamen­ts that transcend limited concepts of race and nation.

These outbursts of oppressive heaviness are all sonically similar, articulati­ng pain as a constant, while the record’s quieter moments experiment – Colin’s plaintive lamentatio­ns atop the delicate refrain of Plus Pres De Toi, the delicate beauty of his croon on A Solitary Reign allowing thoughts and emotions to flourish before being crushed. The traditiona­l motifs of the band’s hardcore roots impress upon us a will to survive adversity, to learn from experience­s and emerge stronger, to use transcende­ntal moments of emotional catharsis to shed our pain, stand up and rejoin life’s fray, moving forward with hope, prepared for whatever chaos has in store.

FOR FANS OF: NEUROSIS, CULT OF LUNA, ISIS TOM O’BOYLE

 ??  ?? Amenra: mass affects
Amenra: mass affects
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom