Metal Hammer (UK)

TETRARCH jump-start the New Wave Of Nu Metal.

Unstable NAPALM

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Atlantean upstarts reignite the nu metal revival

THE IMMINENT REBIRTH of nu metal has been predicted for five years. In that time, everyone from Vein and Northlane to Blood Youth, Ocean Grove and Loathe have taken inspiratio­n from the subgenre’s swaggering spirit. But it’s only in the past few months that a crop of young revivalist­s has emerged looking to put a brand-new spin on the music of their formative years.

Of them all, it’s Atlanta’s Tetrarch who look most likely to break out as the NWONM’S (Nu Wave Of Nu Metal) leading superstars. Unstable, their second album, is a highly polished and proficient affair, containing all the ingredient­s that made nu metal such a force the first time around: bouncing riffs and the kind of instantly memorable choruses that will make venues explode into sweaty, limb-flailing chaos. There’s no dodgy rapping this time around, but Unstable is angsted up to the eyeballs. ‘Looking in the mirror and I hate myself’, vocalist and guitarist Josh Fore rasps on opener, I’m

Not Right, before the track bursts into an onslaught of monstrous grooves and a massive, Linkin Park-esque chorus that takes us right back to 2000 and hating on our parents.

You Never Listen and

Stitch Me Up seethe with creepy, Korn-style guitars, but elsewhere Tetrarch tweak the template with a refreshing vim. The ripping solos from future guitar hero in waiting Diamond Rowe take their cues from Kirk Hammett and Mark Morton rather than Head or Brad Delson. The furious title track and Negative Noise are an evolution of the band’s thrash beginnings, while Addicted pulls from pure metalcore anthemia. No doubt,

Unstable sometimes veers a little close to homage, but it’s executed with confidence and energy that elevates it way beyond a slavish throwback. ■■■■■■■■■■

FOR FANS OF: Korn, Linkin Park, Adema DANNII LEIVERS

 ??  ?? Tetrarch have captured the spirit of nu metal
Tetrarch have captured the spirit of nu metal
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