Interview with Lay Down Rotten

Lay Down Rotten LogoIn Deathspell Catharsis Lay Down Rotten have released a monster of a Death Metal album that does the genre proud. With the precision of veterans and the passion of youth it’s time they answered some questions about how this came about.

For those unfamiliar with your band, introduce yourself!

Hello guys. My name is Jost and I am the vocalist of the Death Metal band Lay Down Rotten that was founded 15 years ago. Deathspell Catharsis is our 7th album to date!

What are your influences?

We have our roots in the Death Metal of the early 90s. Influences and inspirations were and are bands such as Death, Edge Of Sanity, At The Gates. But we have developed a lot since we started out and now we got our own style and sound. We see ourselves as an unique autonomous Death Metal act rather than a copy of a plagiation or trendbands which are very common nowadays.

What are you listening to at the moment that you want to recommend?

I constantly listen to Danzig´s Lucifuge at the moment. But also Woods of Ypres is one of my favourites at the moment. I cannot get enough of this band. Woods 5: Grey Skies & Electric Light is a fantastic album and “Travelling Alone” is one of the most beautiful songs I have ever heard. R.I.P. David Gold!!!!!!!

The songs on the album are longer than “standard”. Do you have any guidelines when writing songs?

Over the years we developed an instinct for laying down the right length of a song. We didn´t pay any attention to this aspect with the new record as everything suited us just fine. Even longer sounds do not sound boring. The dynamic and tempo changes make every song interesting and worthwhile listening to.

How did the lyrics come about?

Me and my brother Elmo (singer of the Pornrockband Kamikaze Kings) write the lyrics for Lay Down Rotten. We have been working for years together and wrote the lyrics for 5 albums so far. We wanted pure fucking Death Metal lyrics for this album as we love Death Metal… lyrics about zombies and human sacrifices included. The lyrics can be seen as a homage to our heroes and our view on some topics as well as an expression of our passion for Metal.

How did the recording progress? Any issues?

No problems at all. We worked with T-Low from the Desert Inn studios again because he knows who we are and what we need as he produced the last 6 albums. It is a perfect match and we are a dream team.

You’ve had many releases now, what keeps you motivated to keep playing Metal?

Lay Down Rotten BandMusic and first of all Metal of course. It´s the best thing in the world. What I love the most is being part of this band, to create music. The music that I love: Death Metal. We always look forward. We do not need motivation or anything. We do what we love and we never stop.

The album is very accomplished – are you happy with it or is there anything you’d change?

I feel like this album is a step further in the right direction. We accomplished a fine balance between brutality and melody. This is a fundamental we can count on.

I love the album cover. How important is the artwork to you?

Thanks! It represents the band and the content of a record to the outside world. The album cover is the first thing you notice even before you hear the first riff. Toshihiro Egawa did a great job again on doing this tremendous cover artwork for us. He and our guitarist Nils worked very hard to develop the concept and achieved outstanding results.

What’s next for Lay Down Rotten? What does 2014 bring?

We will support and promote the new record. We want to play as much open air’s, festivals and club shows as possible. We are planning right now and a tour with our heroes Massacre has been confirmed for May in Germany. Please check our Facebook page and website http://www.laydownrotten.com for further details.

Your Last Wish – Desolation (Review)

Your Last WishCanadian band Your Last Wish play Melodic Death Metal.

After the usual perfunctory opening, first track proper Crisis To Creation opens with a much more impressive dual display of melodics slipping into heavy chugs, repeating over and over until the appetite is well and truly whetted.

Their brand of Melodic Death Metal is fast and sharp, which matches the high-pitched screams of the vocalist who has a rasp to challenge the best of them, although she also does deeper vocals when required.

A starting reference point for this album would be someone like At The Gates or early In Flames. These are only as reference points though as Your Last Wish are not merely wishing to repeat past glories of the masters. They have something of their own to offer.

The riffs are enjoyable and substantial and the crisp, professional sound makes the most of them. Well played solos pour out of the tracks, the vocals are scathing and the drummer provides a backdrop to the carnage.

This is the kind of Melodic Death Metal that they rarely make any more. There is no pretension or leanings of commerciality; no clean harmonies of radio-friendly compromises. This is Metal through and through, and I for one can’t help but like this very talented band.

Give them a listen and give them your support.

A Breach of Silence – Dead or Alive (Review)

A Breach of SilenceThis is the début release from Australian band A Breach of Silence.

The band play a nice line in modern Melodic Death Metal combined with the huge sweeping chorus-style Metalcore that bands like Killswitch Engage popularised.

The singer has a very good voice; his growls are deep and enthusiastic and the clean vocals are passionate and a bit different from the usual of this type as they incorporate a little bit of Power Metal into their delivery, giving them a bit more of an edge.

The music has plenty of bite and aggression with the band playing their hearts out and preforming with gusto. Although they do have breakdowns and whatnot, they don’t completely abuse and over-use them as a lot of these kind of bands have a tendency to do; they seem to have struck the right balance. The songs are largely both heavy and catchy.

Ultimately this does fall into the more commercial end of the Metal spectrum, and won’t be to everyone’s taste. I haven’t listened to a new band of this style for some time and I think A Breach of Silence are very good at what they do. If you’re a fan of heavy modern Metal and don’t object to more commercial melodic clean choruses then check them out.

Hiss From The Moat – Misanthropy (Review)

Hiss From The MoatHiss From The Moat play a modern brand of Blackened Death Metal.

After a perfunctory intro we’re straight into the action with Conquering Christianity which is full of solid blasting and evil mayhem. If you think of a band like Goatwhore and have them take their cues from the New-School rather than the Old-School you’ll be in the right ball-park for Hiss From The Moat.

Deep, guttural vocals and higher rasps steer the songs towards their logical conclusions, while well-played, hyperspeed drums anchor everything and allow the guitars to concentrate on the ultra-brutality or blackened rhythms, depending on how the mood takes them. Additional orchestration heightens the atmosphere in select places, and is strategically used for surgical strikes rather than mass slaughter.

Depth and carnage are the watchwords, for the songs stick around long after they have stopped playing, filling you with the urge to experience their nihilistic bludgeoning once more.

The riffs seem to flow like pulsating tar through veins of blackened darkness and spewed out into the unsuspecting light to corrupt and infect everything they touch. The songs offer nothing but hatred and want nothing in return but your demise. Misanthropy in more than just title.

The album is 30 minutes of extremity wrapped in malevolence and served up by a talented group of individuals and guests who know how they like their Extreme Metal, and I heartily agree with their obvious good taste.

Top marks for a top band. More please.

Von – Dark Gods: Seven Billion Slaves (Review)

VonVeteran US Black Metal band Von return with their new full length album.

The darkness opens with a rumbling, brooding menace and sustains this feeling of malevolence and tension throughout the entire album.

Von ratchet up the pressure using their moody approach to atmosphere well; even when they put their foot on the accelerator the taut environment just keeps getting tighter.

These 9 tracks are Von’s attempt to create a bleak, disheartening experience for the listener; to take them on a Blackened trip to regions uncharted. The songs transport and transform, and once experienced no-one is the same again.

The vocals are Hellish emanations straight from the blackest abyss. Less singing and more arcane belchings of pure misanthropy.

Von have unleashed 54 minutes of darkened art, concentrating on twisted melodies and demonic auras to spread their uncompromising gospel. It won’t be to everyone’s taste of course but what art ever is?

Reproacher – Nothing to Save (Review)

ReproacherReproacher are a Metallic Hardcore band from the US. Having enjoyed Reproacher’s previous releases I was looking forward to checking this one out.

I was not disappointed. This is intense, brutal and heavier than a really heavy thing. Reproacher’s assault is one of pressure and deadly intent.

Coming from the Converge-style of Hardcore this is scathing and vitriol-fuelled extremity. Powered by an undercurrent of Sludge and Crust, these tracks seethe violence from every sweaty pore.

Reproacher are no one-trick band though and they add in variety to their bruising onslaught with some interesting and inventive sections and ideas. The predatory crawl of Ballast contrasts nicely with the grinding charge of The Champion is Fucked, for example.

The album rips along through up-tempo and low-tempo tracks, all the while displaying a feel for thick guitar-based atmosphere and a good variety of songwriting.

This is for all worshippers of heaviness. Bring Reproacher into your world.

Forlorn Path – Man’s Last Portrait (Review)

Forlorn PathThis is the début album from US Melodic Doom/Black/Death Metallers Forlorn Path.

For a début this is well-written, ambitious and implemented with a skill a lot of bands would envy.

Melodic and orchastrated, yet still having an intensity born of pure Metal this is more aggressive and outright better than I was expecting. From the name and album cover I thought I would be hearing a second-rate Gothic Death Metal Paradise Lost clone, but thankfully my hasty pre-judgement was incorrect, and instead we get epic, expansive, symphonic and melodic Blackened Doom of the highest quality.

At just over an hour in length a lot of passion and work has gone into this album to create a journey that you can get your teeth into.

The vocals alternate between a Black Metal rasp and an ultra-deep growl that is just a pure pleasure to experience.

The forlorn atmosphere and rich melodic melancholy combined with an more aggressive assault than a lot of bands of this genre attempt means that the album always entertains and for me is up there with recent melodic Metal greats like Amiensus.

A refreshing and surprising album; I’ve had my expectations completely surpassed and it’s an abject lesson to me that you can’t judge a band by their name or their artwork. What matters, all that matters, is what they sound like, and Forlorn Path sound very good indeed. Highly recommended.

Thalion – Dawn of Chaos (Review)

ThalionCanadian Power Metal with a liberal sprinkling of Speed Metal for good measure.

This won’t win any awards for innovation but it is highly melodic and highly infectious; the band can play, write songs and have a singer who can actually sing. What more is there to say?

Also; solos. Always important to note.

I enjoyed this album, especially as the band throw in a few more modern touches and riffs, (in To Hell and Back for example), thus showing they’re not completely bound to the rule book laid down by the likes of Helloween and Judas Priest.

With the double bass flying, the guitar licks licking (?) and the vocalist singing his heart out it’s hard not to smile and get carried away by their enthusiasm.

A very good début album, and with some small refinements to their songwriting the next one could be great. If you like Speed-influenced Power Metal this is recommended.

Dead – Idiots (Review)

DeadAustralia’s Dead are an unusual beast, consisting as they do of just a bassist and a drummer. The noise they make is somewhere between Punk and Sludge, with more variety than you might think for only having two instruments.

Starting off creepy and atmospheric; when the bass kicks in you can feel it like a physical presence.

There’s plenty going on in these songs, including vocals from multiple people, to keep things interesting.

As the bass and drums are the only instruments they are left bare and exposed for everyone to see with no opportunity to hide what’s going on behind other instruments; due to this the duo have risen to the challenge and ensured that they are always doing something interesting.

This is a dredge through the darkest recesses of forgotten filth, but in the best possible way. The minimalistic Sludge the band come up with and the variety of ideas and delivery on display is a recipe for success in my book.

Favourite Track: Murder Hollow. Creep-tastic.