Hour Of Penance, one of THE most popular technical death metal bands are back with their newest album
Sedition. The album cover features an apocalyptic sight where a two headed colossal serpent is descending to
Earth from a raging thunderstorm upon a city which obviously is in the need of more biology classes and there are bugs flying everywhere. Seems a little extreme right? You know that old proverb, âyou cannot judge a book by its coverâ yeah? Well forget it because it doesn't apply here because once you get past the intro to
Sedition, you immediately are kicked in the ass by; intense drumming, complex riffs and super guttural mid ranged vocals.
Two things came to my mind once I was greeted by the first song: first of all âyesss, they havenât thrown away their brutality that I love oh so very muchâ and secondly, âthis is gonna be one hell of an album!â
As Iâve briefly stated in the introduction, this is one of the best releases from Hour of
Penance. They are one of the very few technical death metal bands out there today who actuallyâŠSTILL MAKE TECHNICAL DEATH METAL. Every band out there, well, every new band out there seem to all have the same mindset which is to invent the fastest, most incoherent variation music that is humanly possible because after all, thatâs what technical death metal is known for right? But I think it is good to still have bands like Hour of
Penance who are there to tend our hunger for some good technical death because lately, people have been coming up with more and more retarded permutations of technical death metal. Bands like
Viraemia, Rings of Saturn,
Slaughterbox and
Fleshgod Apocalypse are all great examples of this (yes ladies and gentlemen, I know that Hour of
Penance and
Fleshgod Apocalypse are related (sort of) but Hour of
Penance doesnât try to force classical music down the throats of metal fans). There is no orchestra in the background trying to get us to like Beethoven, there are no pig squeals to turn us off and there is no âretardationâ of the music.
Sedition is just technical death metal the way it was suppose to be and thatâs definitely a good thing in my book. In fact, Iâm still surprised that stuff like this still exists!
Many people in the world today think that the days of technical death metal are numbered and who can blame them, it hasnât changed much since the earliest bands came to life. Itâs still fast, itâs still brutal and of course⊠itâs still technical but I think that what turns people off is the redundancy of sheer brutality, technicality and speed. Most technical death metal albums sound like youâre just listening to the same track over and over again, constantly looking down at your I-pod to check whether or not itâs stuck on repeat (itâs no wonder why only a small portion of technical death metal bands have gone mainstream). When you think about it, technical death metal seems to be a very hollow genre. Iâm not trying to say or even imply that Hour of
Penance have changed everything or anything concerning the genre with
Sedition, because they havenât done that at all. What they have done however, is made technical death metal, less tedious to listen to. So slightly theyâve done it, but it seems to have uplifted the quality and intensity of the music. Each track has its own technical death metal persona to it, without it feeling like itâs not Hour of
Penance or shouldnât be part of this album.
The more I listen to
Sedition, the more I realise how much Iâve always loved technical death metal.
Dare I say it, but if anyone asked me to define modern day technical death metal I would point them to
Sedition or at least Hour of
Penance. This is THE technical death metal album, who cares if it doesnât break any records for the fastest or most brutal album, who cares if their song writing isnât the most complex, who cares if their music isnât ground breaking in any way, who cares if they arenât every technical death metalâs equivalent to Jesus⊠because I donât. I would rather listen to awesome generic technical death over some tainted and contaminated piece of shit that someone had just so happens to call it technical death metal as one of the 150 genres itâs labelled as. Iâm not going to go as far as saying that âoh, its technical death metal at its purest formâ though, because thatâs incorrect, but I will go as far as saying this is straight up technical death metal with no hidden surprises.
I think the highlight of
Sedition is the variety of tempos theyâve used. Unlike many other bands who try to play so quickly as if theyâre trying to make their tempo approach the speed of light or something, Hour of
Penance play like the way we want them to play, technical but legible (well, really, they play the way they want to play⊠we just happen to like it). There are many tempo changes throughout this album, but they usually oscillate between; super duper quick, to super quick, to quick and relatively quick- thereâs not much in the mid paced zone so click âXâ on the top right corner, microwave and burn your computer right now if youâre looking for anything âmid pacedâ because youâre not going to find it here. Another thing that I feel complements the tempo changes are the change in atmosphere and backdrop throughout
Sedition. Even though the band might be promoting evilness lyrically, itâs not all doom and gloom as far as the atmosphere is concerned. There are times where I even feel slightly uplifted by the guitar riffs. The only thing that is dark about this album, really, is the album cover and even that isnât dark in comparison to what Iâve seen. I find that there is no sense of that kind of dark/heaviness/evil feeling present in
Sedition but thatâs what many death metal bands seem to pride themselves on (across all of its genres). That being said,
Sedition is still worthwhile for all those people who are into that sort of thing.
Overall,
Sedition is a pretty badass album which complements its badass cover. This is pretty much how I would define âgoodâ technical death metal because it has everything that a tech death fan could want. The blast beats, awesome. The melody, beautiful. The song structure, amazingâŠ
Sedition is just the album I want in a technical death metal. The best part of this (but some may argue itâs what lets this album down) is that the music isnât polluted by foreign styles of music like; jazz or classical, itâs just technical death. Like Iâve mentioned before however, there is nothing here thatâs ground breaking, or anything that would ârevolutionizeâ the genre. Theyâve played hard, without the risk of going home. For anyone who wants to have a go at
Sedition, be my guest because itâs a magnificent piece of work. Iâd recommend any track for first time listeners but for those who are too afraid to make a decision, Deprave to Redeem is an alright place to start. To sum
Sedition up in a nutshell, Iâd say itâs flawless but not ground breaking. I give Hour of
Penanceâs album
Sedition a 17/20.