The Union of Crowns
Bury Tomorrow
Nuclear Blast
Rating: - 7/10
British Metalcore crew attempt to
reinvigorate genre
For the past few years Metalcore has been stuck in a
rut. The old guard (Killsiwtch Engage,
Shadows Fall, All That Remains) have all delivered below par album,
especially All That Remains who’s
last offering For We Are Many was so bland
that it sank like a cruise linear in the Mediterranean. Bands such as Parkway Drive and The Devil Wears Prada have stepped out from the pack, this has to
with Parkway being the best at the
heavier end of Metalcore creating monstorous beatdowns, The Devil Wears Prada on the other hand have branched out from the generic
Metalcore formula adding influences from the world of extreme metal especially
on their latest release Dead Throne
and the absolutely fan fucking tastic Zombie
EP. The new breed haven’t faired
much better to be honest with bands like Rise
to Remain, Of Mice & Men & Miss May I have produced good but
generic records that reek of the sum of their influences, there albums aren’t bad
they just sonically remind the audience how absolutely groundbreaking Alive or Just Breathing really is.
The arrival of Hampshire’s own Bury Tomorrow, who on their second album The Union of Crowns have delivered the huge jump start that the genre
desperately need. Whilst this album may not be as constant as The End of Heartache by Killswitch or The Fall of Ideals by All
That Remains and may not stray from the template created by those bands.
But it does make up for it by creating Metalcore anthems; the track Lionheart
could rival established classics such as The
Rose of Sharyn and This Calling.
The band have clearly taken influence from the bands that inspired the first
wave of Metalcore, riffs can clearly be heard that would have fit onto At The Gates albums or any band from the
Gothenburg scene. This makes the album stand out from the rest of the bands in
the scene adding a crushing brutality that has been missing from the scene for
a long time, possibly since the very early Unearth
and Vision of Disorder albums.
Like fell British Metalcore pioneers While She
Sleeps, Bury Tomorrow have resisted sticking to the formula and falling into
mediocrity. Instead the band have strayed from the path and delivered a album
that not only takes influence from what was great about Metalcore and moderises
it will a killer production making everything sound as huge as possible.
Hopefully more bands take notes on what Bury Tomorrow have done and follow
their example. Metalcore could be in for resurgence.
For Fans of: -
Killswitch Engage, At The Gates, While She Sleeps.
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