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7.0
- Band:
Coffin Feeder - Duration: 00:35:11
- Available from: 25/04/2025
- Label:
-
Listenable Records
Streaming not yet available
Coffin Feeder is written, but you can almost read ABORTED. This, in essence, the nature of “Big Trouble”, first full-length (after a couple of EP released in a close tour in 2022) of the project led by the Frontman Sven de Caluwé.
Bracked by some old knowledge of the Death/Grind/Belgian hardcore circuit, with members of Lang Tch'e and Flexdy Melculy (among others) to complete the line-up, the mind behind records such as “Retro Gore”, “Cult Mania” or the recent “Vaults of Horror” returns to be alive on the market with a job that does not play too far from the latter, resuming the Then develop a more Groovy, ignorant and light -hearted speech in the wake of a concept inspired by the universe of action/horror films of the eighties and nineties.
In short, if it is true that the dress is a monk, the bright and bloody artwork by Dan Goldsworthy (CorpsGrinderer, Inhuman Condition, Jasta), potpourri of quotes to the various “cobras”, “they live” and “predator”, can only be the best possible introduction to these thirty -four minutes of modern Death metal and probably designed to corroborate a session to corroborate a session Training in the gym, for listening that – consistent with the nature of the operation – entertains without effort to be something that is not.
Simple music (although the technical quotient is obviously not of the most elementary) that flows between excited assaults, dynamic breakdown and epic-atmospheric punctures deriving both from the use of cinematographic sample, and of black metal solutions to recall precisely what has been done by the aborted in the last decade, with the unmistakable timbre of 'Svencho' to transmit a sense of familiarity and-above all-reliability- about the contents of the tracklist.
It is an entertainment that never expires in the background plate, the one set up by the Flemish quintet in these furrows: a cocktail that, although not being able to compare directly with a “vaults …” or with the best of the production of similar groups such as Benighted, Cattle decapital and Desphed Icon, certainly does not skimp with effective riffs and captivating solutions, confirming the care reposed in this showing off Hollywood brazes (“Remember When I Said I'm Kill You Last? The Lieds!“) And brutality Extreme Metal.
Something undoubtedly more compelling and spontaneously, too much contemporary death-core, and that between a “Porkchop Express”, an “If it Bleeds” and a “a good day to die” can be said to be bean helmets with the need for the escape of spring.
Daniel D`Amico for SANREMO.FM