Showing posts with label ANTIGAMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANTIGAMA. Show all posts

3.22.2023

ANTIGAMA

 







"whiteout"
Year:  2022
Country:  Poland
City:  Warszawa
Label:  Selfmadegod 
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  11
Time:  25 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore













It’d be easy to pick up ‘Whiteout‘ on blind impulse and quickly sum Polish grindcore artistes Antigama upon sight as a post-‘Inhale/Exhale‘ and ‘Enemy of the Music Business‘ inspired gig and that’d be fair n’ fitting enough assessment ’til you’ve sat with their whole discography and taken in how their initially avant-garde (for its time) sound developed within their twenty plus year, eight LP ride up to this point. From underground grind labels in the early 2000’s to a several album run with Relapse and eventually back to premiere grinding death stans Selfmadegod with ‘Meteor‘ circa 2013 these folks have developed their sound with each step while still maintaining a ruthless, classic death-grinding riff attack. That sixth album was the point where their noisy, math-metallic, harshing experimental edge found its most signature face, never losing the odd-angled personae of the group but cinching up their performances to a new point of precision-based surrealism. Pick up anything from the band in the last ten to twelve years and the evolutionary gait of their work walks a clear enough line between the interplay of their riffs/rhythms and a knack for finding various ways to keep it weird. ‘Whiteout‘ ain’t all that different, if anything it is their most straight forward ripper to date.

If you do decide to wheel all the way back in time to the early 2000’s the peak statement from the circa 2000 formed Warsaw-based group’s original modus landed somewhere between the still underrated breakthrough of ‘Zeroland‘ (2005) and the sort of go-to off-kilter attack of ‘Resonance‘ (2007). They’d quickly moved to refine and repossess their sound between 2008-2013 and in terms of their major reorientation, or, point of decided-upon evolutionary post-hardcore/’progressive’ skilling up, the monolith had been discovered and crowned on ‘The Insolent‘ (2015), justifying a longer-than-ever break between full-lengths at that point. Where next? Well, it now seems like rather than fighting upstream the band decided to let it flow around them a bit and let the dissolution of expectations stack up. I hadn’t written about the band until ‘Depressant‘ in 2017 where I’d ignored plenty of this context for the sake of a quick rip through the larger bent of their discography, suggesting that EP represented a trend of one-upping past releases with new ideas. The truth of it seems to be that these folks have eclectic taste in general and deathgrind is their foil to whip it all together into an apex form of extreme metal, which I’d add has always been heavy on the riffs even when they’d dropped a lot of their math metal/’noisecore’ gravel grinding.

Whether or not you’ve taken the time to dig through their past, or their more recent work ‘Whiteout‘ doesn’t make a jarringly -new- case for Antigama‘s sound but rather a good one that will appeal to folks whom still love the classics but appreciate a twisted spin on aging ways. They really do just bash it out as fast and hard as possible for most of this ~29 minute album, leaning into a few odd tangents here and there but minimizing their experimental side until a few novel moments expand the greater palette on the second half. The vortex created in the wake of such brutality is undeniably entertaining, not only impressive as spastic grindcore-birthed death metal riff magic but also appreciably furious and (to some degree) thought provoking work otherwise. I’d had some difficulty deciding if this approach was more naked than usual, whether it left something to be desired or not but ultimately their machine-like, dystopic and digital-aged form of always 100% powered-up deathgrind managed to be a memorable, flex-heavy full listen and not the sort of thing one should overthink.

In terms of when things take a different turn the anxietous wringing of “Disasters” eventually works in some unexpected vocal work, though you could argue this is more of a late 90’s metal moment rather than a true freak-out. The same could be said of “Howlers” which incorporates a sort of simple percussive brilliancy with a bit of bongo-blasting snare interplay, a touch of what the band were experimenting with on ‘Resonance‘ and ‘Warning‘ back in the late 2000’s. I personally love that sort of ‘tribal’ rhythmic extension of aggressive beats eh, when it doesn’t head in an alt/groove metal direction. The most out-there piece on the album comes at its conclusion with “2222” featuring saxophonist Marcin Kajper, whom has also worked with classic heavy/thrashers Turbo in the past. It isn’t the first instance of saxophone in deathgrind I’ve heard (Siege‘s “Grim Reaper“, if that counts?) but it is a brilliant collaboration thanks to a combination of wily runs and creative rhythmic follow. A playfully dystopic send-off for an album I was sure would plainly decapitate me start to finish.

To be fair the rest of the album did whip my skull off the majority of the time, pulling me back into the exciting, brutal extremes of deathgrind that’d almost miraculously extended the potable ‘mainstream’ successes of grind throughout the 2000’s thanks to bands like Nasum, Pig Destroyer and Discordance Axis. Lead single “Holy Hand” was the exact right way to pull me in, at least beyond the sheer density of “Undeterminate” / “Debt Pool”, in terms of nostalgic ideation with its heavy-handed downstroked hardcore punk chugs and machine grinding swells. The song itself it lands more metallic hardcore than anything else and I guess I was surprised Antigama didn’t lean heavier in this direction if only for the sake of how popular simple chug hooks and late 90’s revisionism is nowadays. Instead of getting stuck on that groove ‘Whiteout‘ mashes at the extra ‘The Code is Red… Long Live the Code’-esque riffing of “Dust Farm” (and “Unclear Conversations” for that matter), an extension of what they were doing on ‘Depressant‘ which bleeds into aforementioned standout “Disasters”. Anyhow, a track-by-track won’t ever read as much of a thrill on paper as it will in ear, in fact it only highlights the small amount of requisite listening one might need to do to appreciate the style of deathgrind these guys are hammering away at.

The hot tempered, maniac rush of ‘Whiteout‘ supersedes the noveau-grind details and constant swerve out of the norm featured on the band’s best known releases to some degree. This might be a detractor for those expecting a record they can tout as ‘progressive’ or forward thinking but from my perspective this is Antigama focusing on putting the hardest reactionary punch they can and really, it is where they’ve always shined most. What they’ve whipped up in this half hour is the sort of stuff that you’ll want to see performed live, big-time moshable 2-3 minute pieces and athletic sweat-and-spit fling fests which the grindcore tag today deserves such a loud, brutal reminder of. A moderately high recommendation (*Review by HERE ).
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"meteor"
Year:  2013
Label:  Selfmadegod
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  11
Time:  20 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"warning"
Year:  2009
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD
Tracks:  17
Time:  34 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"resonance"
Year:  2007
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  17
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"zeroland"
Year:  2005
Label:  Selfmadegod
Format:  CD
Tracks:  9
Time:  35 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"discomfort"
Year:  2004
Label:  Extremist
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  12
Time:  26 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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2.14.2021

ANTIGAMA

 










"intellect made us blind"
Year:  2002
Label:  The Flood
Format:  CD
Tracks:  10
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"discomfort"
Year:  2004
Label:  Selfmadegod
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  11
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"zeroland"
Year:  2005
Label:  Selfmadegod
Format:  CD
Tracks:  8
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"resonance"
Year:  2007
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD
Tracks:  17
Time:  36 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"warning"
Year:  2009
Counttry:  Poland
City:  Warsaw
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD
Tracks:  16
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore














Antigama is mostly a band that releases split albums, as they have more of those than full-lengths. I have no idea why that is, but it seems to be a by-product of the grind scene, with every band seemingly doing splits with every other grind band in existence. Still, between all that splitting, Antigama have release their fifth album, titled Warning. It was always going to be a big ask to overcome the brilliance that was Resonance, so how exactly did they do?

Well, let’s see here. From the get-go, the first thing you’ll hear is the production. The second thing you’ll hear is the sound of the drums, particularly the snare drum. Sounds different, doesn’t it? Well, different is right, but a positive or negative difference is a judgement call. Personally, I don’t think it sounds as good as it did on Resonance, but at the same time, it sounds more real, so I guess the two eventually cancel each other out. Almost. Anyway, as “Disconnected” blasts from your speakers/headphones, you’ll notice that it’s already sounding a lot more chaotic than most of the material on their previous album, and that trend persists throughout. It’s almost like they took most of their inspiration from Resonance, yet took slices from Discomfort, as well. For those that have not heard Discomfort, it was a chaotic blend of grind that was always teetering on the verge of a complete mess, but never actually fell. Here, they seem to have honed in on the skill of not turning the music into a frenzied pandemonium, so they’ve found a good balance between the two. I actually enjoy this. If Warning was created eight years ago, it would not have sounded the way it does.

The stop/start riffing is still present, but it’s not as obvious as it was before. It appears at 0:27 on “Jealousy,” and it sounds really good. The main riff in “War” is a little like that, as well, and it is one of my favourite tracks from this album. In fact, most of the riffs in that song are catchy as hell. The shuffle rhythm in “Lost Skull” has more of a poppy feel, but it works well.

The drumming is top-notch, much like it was before, but one thing I noticed was that the smaller toms are not used as clearly as they were on Resonance. I can still hear them pop up from time to time, but there’s no rolling fills any more. This is a bit of a shame, really, because I enjoyed him exploiting the shit out of them. Bring back the smaller toms! I guess the reason for their omission is that Warning isn’t as central on the drumming as Resonance was, but dammit, bring them back, I say!

What was slightly disappointing for me was the final track “Black Planet,” because, much like on the album Zeroland, it’s an ambient track that goes on for a long time. I was hoping for a long grind song, but was sorely disappointed when I realised that was not going to occur. I will admit that “Black Planet” is quite bleak, and does make you feel alone, if that was its intentions, of course, and is a better close than “Zeroland” could ever hope for. The same can’t be said for the filler track “Paganini Meets Barbapapex.” That is really choppy, and I wouldn’t blame you if you pressed the skip button there.

The vocalist is a new guy, yet he sounds just like the old guy! He has slightly more range, and employs more of a harsher yell, but other than that, he’s basically the same vocalist in a different skin. No complaints there.

So, there’s some really cool songs on here, such as “War,” and “You Have The Right To Remain Violent,” but overall, I think it’s ever-so-slightly weaker than Resonance is. I would call it a sideways step for Antigama – not exactly better than before, but I can’t fault their performance. If their next album is like Warning, well, I definitely won’t be protesting. Chalk another winner up for this great, and still improving, band.
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"the insolent"
Year:  2015
Label:  Selfmadegod
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  10
Time:  40 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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