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Ahhhhhh, Virginia. There’s just something about the Dominion that continually churns out extremity.
I needn’t remind you of the killer labels and bands keeping the hardcore flag firmly planted in the Mother of States.
Enter Skincrawler, a gloriously rotten three piece splitting time between RVA and Norfolk.
This decidedly nasty proposition is a plague band for the end times. Recorded during the seemingly endless and bleak tumult that was 2020, their self-titled debut EP is a vile 4-pack of blackened hardcore worthy of your blasphemous attention.
Donning such a sinister moniker and appropriately dank sonics, their atmosphere isn’t strictly doom laden. Skincrawler’s unique blend of hardcore and black metal is granted a bit of grindcore’s levity.
The prelude to the opening track “The Violence of Everyday Life” is a skit. In what feels like an Office Space water cooler nightmare vision of hovering middle managers and the soul-sucking workaday grind, the band knows their way around a joke.
Thankfully, the band eschews the self-serious pomp of black metal in favor of the lo-fi maelstrom. In much the same way a band’s standard “Intro” track lays the foundation, Skincrawler’s opening gambit unleashes tremolo riffs that hover like rotten wings over a clattering and building mess of percussion.
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Giving way into “Old Routines”, the greatest of all surprises are the clearly decipherable vocals. Though it feels like front person The Rabid Danimal’s come through with a booming echo, as if buried in mildewed crypt.
Equally shrouded in mysterious monikers are Drucifer and Witch Doctor M, whose guitar and drums respectively hammer their hardcore fury with a dash of frenzied d-beat and the buzzing hornet tones of US black metal.
The B side, as it were, is where things truly blossom. “Nothing Gained” and closer “Let Them Suffer” distill their sound expertly. The former is sports a monstrous breakdown, albeit one fortified by a malevolence cribbed from black metal’s pompous corpse.
The drums, however wild, feel as though the listener is being rained upon by nailbombs. The latter closes things like a rusted mausoleum door, cemented shut after a barrage of nasty thrash and a deftly played serpentine riff.
It’s quite clear that surgical precision is no difficult task for this crew, but there’s also a treble-heavy discordance that adds a level of violence to the collection. Forget the creepy crawlies, this band is skin-flaying.
Get on this.
Tagged: skincrawler