Metal Hammer (UK)

OF MICE & MEN

-

Defy

RISE

SoCal’s melodic metallers embark on a new chapter

The World cerTAinly

turned colder for Of Mice

& Men last December when just months after the release of album number four, crippling health issues finally forced Austin Carlile to step away from the mic. It would be yet another spanner threatenin­g to wreck the band’s success, which, despite their steady ascendancy, seemed to be continuall­y mired by external circumstan­ces and personal frustratio­ns. With the task of filling his predecesso­r’s boots resting heavy on the shoulders of bassist/clean singer Aaron Pauley, one can only imagine the pressure to open a new chapter, rather than allow the book to slam shut. Undeterred, this latest incarnatio­n have picked up where they left off – if anything, with Defy the quartet have rediscover­ed the unrestrain­ed abandon and melodic soul that made releases like The Flood and Restoring Force such enduring favourites in a scene choked with metalcore also-rans. After the rambunctio­us clamour of the title track comes the rampaging riffery of songs like groove-laden Instincts and the searing bombast of call-to-arms Back To Me. Huge choruses and gang chants permeate rager How Will You Live, Aaron sounding completely at home switching effortless­ly between abrasive, throat-gargling shouts and emotive cleans refrains. Warzone’s combinatio­n of colossal hooks and metallic insurgency interspers­ed with blastbeats will delight those who love the SoCal natives at their heaviest, whilst the searing balladry of If We Were Ghosts places them somewhere between Beartooth and Breaking Benjamin. Diehard fans may pine for a bygone era, but the outcome of this evolutiona­ry step ensures that Of Mice & Men are a long way from finished.

FOR FANS OF: ASKING ALEXANDRIA, MEMPHIS MAY FIRE,

THE AMITY AFFLICTION

SOPHIE MAUGHAN

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Of Mice & Men:
defying fate
Of Mice & Men: defying fate

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom