*U.S, standard pressing.
Contains 10 tracks total.
Country: GermanyLanguage: English
Genre: Thrash Metal
.FLAC via Mega (Link)
.AAC 256 kbps via Mega (Link)
© 2016 Metal Blade Records
Review by Kevin Stewart-Panko for Metal Injection.net
There's been a surprising wealth of
albums over the past handful of years emerging from the maw of bands
that originally kicked it, along with some ass, back in the 80s.
Somewhere along the line, the old timers discovered the fountain of
youth, energy and rejuvenation as it applies to the power of metal.
Whether they came back from long hiatuses or were thrashing all along,
it would appear that the folks in Overkill, Onslaught, Hirax, Artillery, Death Angel and Raw Power
(yeah, they’re a hardcore band, but they're still older than your pops
and one of my favourites of all time. So there) have managed to ignore
the aches and creaks of advancing chronology and conventional mainstream
thought that this whole playing-metal-into-your-40s-and-50s thing is a
phase in order to deliver a series of pretty storming releases. Of
course, there has been just as much, if not more, of an expansive, Steve
McQueen-in-The Blob-like growth of shite to contend with, but
that’s par for a course that those culprits should either retire to or
have never left in the first place.
Chalk up The Raging Tides, the
fourth album in total for this Frankfurt/New York City long-standing
Teutonic thrash institution, in the category of the former. Exumer originally came to being in the early 80s, released a kick ass debut in the form of Possessed by Fire
in 1986 and a few not-so-hot subsequent releases. The band was pretty
much silent until the festival circuit started waving cash under their
noses in the early 00s. The Raging Tides is the band’s second release since reconvening back in 2008 (Fire and Damnation
followed a couple years after dusting off the oldies during the initial
thrash revival) and sweet goddamn has the band surprised, impressed and
simply blown me the fuck away!
To be equally hyperbolic as objective,
this album exists as a near-perfect example of old school sound, energy
and song writing acumen mildly viewed through the lens of modern metal
and the clinically clean production value of today. Hands down, it’s a
raging (yeah, sorry about that) collection of incisive thrash metal done
in the vein of their Teutonic cohorts like Kreator, 21st century Destruction and post-Persecution Mania Sodom. Being that Exumer
originally hail from those days known as 'back in the day,' that they
combine rapid fire riffing with half-time middle eights and great
amounts of attention aimed at the directive of achieving consistently
infectious choruses is a natural and welcome. One after another, after
another, they offer up absolute barn stormers in the form of
“Catatonic,” “Sacred Defense,” “Brand of Evil,” and “Death Factory” that
not only play to fiery thrashing and forward sonic propulsion, but
possess refrains that’ll penetrate brains to find themselves hummed, air
guitar-ed and fist pumped to for weeks to come.
The alternate picked main riff of the
title track is a familiar injection of energy, at once technical, yet
simple, in a “Blackened” sort of approach with classic thrash bridge
riffs based on E-string pedals and enough gang vocals to make you wonder
if bassist Tony Schiavo [ex-Subzero and Skarhead]
snuck some of his NYHC buddies into the studio off the clock. “Welcome
to Hellfire” and “Sinister Souls” both have classic German thrash
written all over and into them with
the only downside(s) being the above-mentioned sterile production and
those few moments when the band takes its collective foot off the gas.
When Exumer slows down, they display a noticeable
weakness that exhibits itself in a sound that’s not grimy enough for
sustained lumbering chord progressions (examples include their cover of Pentagram’s “Forever My Queen” and “Shadow Walker”). And whether you want to chastise them for lifting from Exodus’ “A Lesson in Violence” during “There Will Always be Blood” is up to your discretion.
The point of necessity that requires mentioning is that it’s not that The Raging Tides
has rewritten the wheel and presented a completely novel take on its
chosen brand of musical vocation. To the contrary, Exumer has simply
penned a robust album dripping with strong riffs, cogent arrangements
and copious amounts of energy with little to no filler that’ll give
credence to the idea that old dudes still have it in them and thrash
best.
8.5/10
tags: exumer, the raging tides, 2016, flac,
Thank you Bucc!..
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