8.10.2019

HARM'S WAY
























"posthuman"
Year:  2018
Country:  US
City:  Chicago, IL
Label:  Metal Blade
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  10
Time:  34 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Metalcore













Harm's Way is an straight edge (vegan, anti-drugs, anti-alcohol) and political hardcore punk band from Chicago, and this latest album shows their raw strength while adding shades of modern and alternative metal for character. the philosophy of Harm’s Way is the best offense is as much offense as possible. The Chicago band began as a hardcore group with some powerviolence thrown in, but soon juiced it all up with beefcake breakdowns and got ready to brawl. Isolation in 2011 and Blinded in 2013 injected that hardcore with Swedish death metal while never abandoning their roots. With 2015’s Rust, they swapped the death metal for more industrial and ’90s groove metal influences, essentially creating a hardcore version of Roadrunner Records’ heyday roster like Fear Factory and Roots-era Sepultura, and they continue on that path on their fourth record, Posthuman. There’s a beauty to how Harm’s Way throw around such weight like boulders are pillows. It’s difficult to not be in awe of how “Human Carrying Capacity” and “Sink” dispatch punches with efficiency and brawn, where asserting might is the same as breathing, effortless and necessary. Vocalist James Pligge is an imposing figure on stage—he’s a weightlifter who could easily pass for a younger, bulked up John Joseph of the Cro-Mags—and he sounds even tougher and more assured here than before. Even if you have a distaste for competition, the band’s dedication to pure athleticism really pays off. “Become a Machine” is a string of pummeling breakdowns, an especially muscular performance from a band who defines swole. Even when there’s a lot of reexamining masculinity in hardcore, in music, and across all of culture and politics broadly, there still is value in raw strength. While still a hardcore record, Posthuman does tip the balance towards Rust’s industrial flirtations. “Temptation” takes Godflesh’s rumbling, mechanical bass and sets it to a slinking Jesus Lizard groove, then charts a course that resembles if Deftones went further in on their dream pop influences. There’s a running joke that post-punk is something you get into once you age out of hardcore, ditching your Youth of Today crewneck for an ill-fitting Unknown Pleasures shirt. By “Temptation”’s end, though, Harm’s Way avoid falling into that trap by unleashing a blistering final attack, going harder than ever (*Review by Andy O'Connor ).
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"no Gods, no Masters"
Year:  2011
Label:  Closed Casket
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  11
Time:  34 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Hardcore








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