Interview with Ferium

Ferium Logo

Israeli Death Metallers Ferium have released their début album Reflections recently and have been receiving a warm reception. They’re clearly passionate about what they do and it was good to catch up with their frontman Tiran to get him to spill the beans on the entire thing…

For those who are unfamiliar with your band – introduce yourself!

Tiran: We are Ferium, a 5-piece Death Metal Band from Israel.

Tiran Ezra – Vocals
Guy Goldenberg – Guitar
Elram Boxer – Guitar
Yoni Biton – Bass
Ron Amar – Drums

Give us a bit of background to Ferium

After a release of an E.P & a performance at the 09′ Wacken Metal battle we’ve went through a couple of line-up changes that consists the band today, 2013 saw us open for Gojira and go on our first European tour with The Agonist & Threat Signal, on the 7th of April our début album of 4 years full of hard work, sweat & blood has been released and has been receiving some attention including you guys! Hehe

Ferium Band 2What are your influences?

We take inspiration from the mundane actions of human beings as friends, spouses or just focusing on the scum that people close to you can be.

When it comes to the musical influence, we try not to input too much of it into our music, we just let the muse roll.

What are you listening to at the moment that you would like to recommend?

TesseracT – Altered State, if anybody doesn’t know them yet, then shame on you!

Where do you think you fit in with the wider Metal scene?

I would like to think that people who just like good Metal will like us, but if you mean to say with bands, then I think that the best scene to get along musically would be Whitechapel and/or Gojira.

What did you want to achieve with your new album?

The main goal was to get our music out to the people, it’s an image that we’ve worked on a lot in the last 4 years, and it’s important for us to get that across, because this album is just a part of a saga that will reveal itself when the next albums come.
Are you happy with how it turned out?

Everything, couldn’t be better.

The sound has that Oomph that we wanted to get across with the concept of the album, and the songs are well thought out, and the album can be considered as a concept album, which is the epitome of an ‘album’ in my eyes.

Ferium BandGive us a bit of information on the songwriting process.

The writing for Reflections has been partially with the band in full, but most of it was written by Elram, Tiran & Guy at Elram’s studio and then brought to Ron & Yoni for their take on the specific riffs.

Talk to us about the vocals – did these come naturally or are they more considered?

Lyrically, the concept was chosen beforehand so we could actually plan out the sequence of events in the story told.

From there we started touching specific subjects that bother us on a daily basis.
How do you see your songs/direction developing in the future?

We have a plan for the next couple of albums, it will be a slow rise to build the concept behind the music, but it is an epic journey inside the minds of us as writers, there are a lot of ideas flying around.

What’s next for Ferium?

We are planning a European tour in autumn, we would love to go out earlier!

But the plan is basically – TOURS!

Thank you for taking interest in our band!

Ferium – Reflections (Review)

FeriumThis is the début album from Ferium who come from Israel and play Death/Groove Metal with a slight Metalcore-style influence.

This is rabble-rousing groove Metal with a firm Death Metal basis and only a little bit of -core influence added in. A case could be made for calling them Deathcore I suppose, but they don’t share a lot of common ground with most Deathcore bands, (more emphasis on melody and less on breakdowns, etc.), and thus I feel this would be doing them somewhat of a disservice. Genre label quibbles aside, the emphasis is on the Metal, as it should be.

I suppose if you take a cross of, say Lamb of God and Arch Enemy and add more of classic Death Metal influence you’d be in the right area. Or conversely if you take some older bands such as Lipid and Konkhra and add a modern influence you’d end up in similar territory.

The songs are growers; they have an initial impact certainly, but require time to fully appreciate as they are the kind of songs that are unhurried, secure in the knowledge that they’re capable and worthy of repeat visitations.

This is at least partly to do with the fact that a lot of the riffs used here are midway between melodic and brutal, making them stand out and peak the curiosity. The band flirt with Melodic Death Metal but always pull back to heavier climes before fully embracing this destination. It’s an interesting listen.

The vocalist has quite the range, whether it’s deep growls or terror-inducing screams. He has the rhythmic patterns of a modern Metal shouter and the lungs of a Behemoth.

Ferium have produced a quality listen with enough longevity to keep things lively. Let’s see where this band end up as they have a lot to offer the discerning metal fan.

Dead Earth Politics – The Queen of Steel (Review)

Dead Earth PoliticsDead Earth Politics are from the US and play modern Thrash/Groove Metal.

This is southern-tinged Modern Metal in the style of Lamb of God, et al, only with a slightly more Metal twist and some nice melodic choruses. Look at the album cover. Look at the song titles. There is no weak pseudo-Metal here.

Said melodic choruses are not of the sickly, saccharine variety; instead they’re all about the Metal and owe more to Pantera than the more modern Metalcore clones.

The riffs are good and the songs have plenty of energy. The band also don’t shy away from solos, which is always a welcome thing to hear.

The vocals are modern Metal shouting, combined with the aforementioned cleans with some even verging on Power Metal territory. Almost.

I’ve seen this band described as a cross between classic Metal and New American Metal and I think this description fits. Either way this short 3 track EP has the songs to play in the big leagues and is clearly the result of talented minds.

An enjoyable EP, and if they can harness this energy and songwriting finesse then whatever upcoming album they may be working on should be well worth a listen. Based on this release I’m looking forward to what they do next.

A modern take on fantasy Metal? Works for me.

Asylum – Inmate (Review)

AsylumIndian Metal band Asylum have released Inmate, a five track EP containing 21 minutes of music.

Thrashy groove-heavy Death Metal is essentially Asylum’s choice of assault, and they do this well. Sounding akin to a modern Thrash band only with harsher vocals and more of a bouncy Death Metal feel to the riffs. Some guitar solos even raise their heads; always welcome.

The singer has a top-quality voice. Deep but defined and clear. It works well with the crisp music the band play.

The songs are enjoyable enough and bounce along with glee. Mid-paced Death Metal that has plenty of rhythm always puts me in mind of Grave, no matter what. Even here where there are few similarities between the bands, (Asylum certainly don’t have that Swedish sound and they’re more New-School, than Old-), Grave can’t help but enter my thoughts. A slightly irrelevant aside of course, but sometimes it’s good to veer off-topic slightly.

Anyway – back to the band at hand. I enjoyed this EP and if they can keep this up and refine their sound even further the band will do well. Check them out.

Loudrage – Uglier Than Thou (Review)

LoudrageUgly music indeed. Heavy and battering, but with unexpected melodic flourishes now and again. Loudrage come from Romania and play Death Metal that’s heavy on the groove, reminding of classic bands like Grave and Konkhra in their heyday.

The first song Doomed is a classic-in-the-making, such a good song it is. I was expecting this to be a one-off but then the second song As Long As I Live is similarly impressive, (although not quite as good as Doomed). The rest of the EP follows on in a similar vein – top-quality, well-written songs which are catchy and have rhythms and riffs to die for.

Each song shares a similar construction; mid-paced, groove-laden, almost-Swedish-style Death Metal that really knows how to wield hooks, riffs and songwriting skills to get the most out of this style of music. Each song is menacing and bouncy at the same time, (as odd as that sounds), and has an energy that is undeniable.

The vocalist is excellent. The deepness of the growls touches something primeval inside and has all of the bowel-loosening qualities necessary to be incredibly satisfying. The higher screams are equally proficient.

The EP has a strong, clear, crunchy sound that fits the songs like a glove. An iron glove made for SMASHING!

I am genuinely surprised by how good this EP is. A band I hadn’t heard of coming out of seemingly nowhere who somehow appear to have delivered an absolute triumph of a release. How they remain unsigned is beyond me. Go and get this now.