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6 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Stranger Stranger,
By Luke Rounda "ThreeStarSmash.com" (Lawrence, KS) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fear Before (Dig) (Audio CD)
Art damaged fretboard arsonists Fear Before the March of Flames have always been an odd beast. Their wild-eyed and bloodthirsty records travel in pairs.
In the mood for screamo? Look up their fame inducing Odd How People Shake. Just don't expect "On the Brightside, She Could Choke," that record's scene kid approved favorite, to be on their live setlist ever again. If Odd How... isn't abrasive enough, the raw meat, jet turbine squall of the bordering-on-unlistenable, but appropriately titled Art Damage surely shall be. For better or worse, Fear Before have never been afraid to piss into the wind, or upon less open-minded fans. 2006 was the year that saw them prove it. A far cry from those early ventures, the everything but the kitchen sink, industrial/electronica experimentation of The Always Open Mouth saw to it that these Colorado natives were henceforth counted among a tiny handful of bands that consistently reinvent themselves for every record. "There's nothing stranger than a stranger," they're quick to tell us. Lately, their music has metamorphosized from creepy-crawly, "quick, smash it before it touches me" scene hardcore into something melodic, yet noisy, and above all, unclassifiable. The Always Open Mouth bartered Fear Before's abrasive heaviness for sonic density, yielding a crop of songs which sound ferocious on record, but pose problems to recreate in a live context. Here, brevity acts as the sugar to help the medicine go down. As long as you don't miss the March of Flames of yesteryear, Fear Before is their greatest and most easily-swallowed record yet. Clocked at under 40 minutes, everything's shorter on Fear Before, right down to the band's officially truncated name. And it's tighter, too. Hooks immediately dig in deep when "Tree Man" lunges for the jugular with its spooky vocalizations and palm-muted rundowns. "I'm Fine Today" pits gothic wails against a battering ram guitar chug, and "Fear Before Doesn't Listen To People Who Don't Like Them" opens with the sputtering, desperate heart murmur of an amplifier at breaking point, then descends into passages that concoct imagery of Adam Fisher strumming helicopter blades instead of guitar strings. Mostly quiet (mostly) "Jabberwocky" plays like "Absolute Future Pt. 2," a complete departure from the band's earlier works, sinister and comfortable in its eerily sparse arrangement. But wait! Noise mavens, never fear! Fear Before still dabble in discord, as on the closing "Review Our Lives (Epic)." A mashed-up wall of Marshall stacks, and the off-kilter duet of guitarist Fisher and singer David Marion's voices, clear the way for lonely trem-picked sirens. The song descends into deconstructed sludge riffs and implodes, concluding the record in a soup of Satanic noise. If their track record is any indication, Fear Before's next record (2010's self-titled Fear, perhaps?) will bear even less resemblance to the cookie cutter, wrist-slicer screamo of their past... and probably won't sound anything like this, either. They don't care what you or I think. So, enjoy their newfound love of metal/noise-pop while you can, on this and on The Always Open Mouth. Knowing them, it's sure to be fleeting.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An intriguing and rivaling work,
By Craig (Ca) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fear Before (Dig) (Audio CD)
To properly review this album, or even listen to this album for that matter, one should throw out everything they know or think they know about music.
This album is filled with a whole lot of weird; something Fear Before have found a magnificent and creative way to convey to you and me. Much like on their previous album The Always Open Mouth, this album carves out its own little niche in a scene overcrowded with generic fluff. Having the guts to go for something this unique is what makes this band so incredible. I couldn't agree more with the (1) other reviewer, and I really hope this album catches the ears of those willing to expand and grow with it. Hence the plant on the front cover? Who knows. I find it sad and almost tragic that the best music being made today goes relatively unnoticed. Most people will never hear of this band. In the end, this album is another "grower", just like TAOM. The guitars are beautifully layed. The melodies are complex and at times, confusing. The drums are much more "full" sounding (versus TOAM) to give this album a much more cohesive flow. The vocals are beautifully weird (haha) and the subject matter can be confusing at times. That sums up a just about perfect album for me. 10/10 (or i guess 5/5)
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I am honored to be the first to review this masterpeice,
This review is from: Fear Before (Dig) (Audio CD)
Fear Before has taken a new turn in music, creating something very different not only from their work, but from music in general.
This album may sound strange at first, a combination of catchy rhythms and creepy undertones. But after a few listens, the epic and emotional sonic climaxes are inescapable, and the things that seemed strange will progressively sound better and better with each listen. You will be very glad you bought this CD. There is a-lot more singing from David compared to previous albums, and his distinct voice compliments the music perfectly. This CD does not feature artwork from Brandon, rather a friend of the band who helped create the "Taking Cassandra to the End of the World Party" video designed the artwork. If you decide to buy this CD, prepare your mind to stretch and experience a whole new type of music, a very rich sound and beautifully put together album. Each song is magnificently written as well as played. There are no filler songs, only the bands favorite songs made it to this album. This CD has already and will continue to create brand new fans that otherwise could not appreciate Fear Before's talents. If you enjoy Fear Before's musical talent despite what 'type' of music they happen to be playing, you will thoroughly enjoy this album. I love all their previous albums, and this album is a worthy addition to their already outstanding and diverse collection. I realized that if people don't like it, it is because they cannot keep up with the amazing progress this band is making, or they make the mistake of comparing it to their previous albums (which is about as useful as comparing apples to oranges). Yes it is different, but it is also fantastic!
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Only True Artist Today,
By Hack n' Slash "Signed, a Pirate who hates Ninjas" (Getting high on violence) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Fear Before (Dig) (Audio CD)
Nuf said. In all the muck of music being produced present, it's refreshing to hear something that bears no similarity to anything else...and is good.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fear Before Returns with a vengance,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fear Before (Dig) (Audio CD)
This album is awesome. If you like heavy music this is something you must at least try. Fear Befores 4th album is more straightforward than their last effort "The Always Open Mouth", My favorite songs would be "Get Your Life Together" which has some very heavy riffs mixed with great vocals. Other good songs are "Tycho", "Review Our Lives (Epic)", "I'm fine today", and "Stay Weird". The only song that Isn't noteworthy is the 8th track "Bad Days". Something I would compare this to is Circa Survives debut album Juturna, but just much heavier, if you like weird music/lyrics, try this one out.
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
what?,
By
This review is from: Fear Before (Dig) (Audio CD)
so browsing through amazon i noticed this cd has a 5 star rating, and please, do not get me wrong Fear Before The March Of Flames is one of my favorite bands. Ever since Art Damage came my way purely accidentally, i checked out Odd How People Shake and was hooked.
Then The Always Open Mouth came out and man oh man was i blown away, it was a brave step, a perfect mix of genres, it was epic, dark, honest, beautiful and heavy all in one. So it came to no surprise that i waited for their fourth, and after 237 (B-side) came out and seeing them live i was chomping at the bit, and wikipedias page for the band was my homepage....ad months passed..and then Fear Before came out, i must have been the first guy in Connecticut to grab a copy and threw that baby in my player after many many listens i can safely say that this is the single most dissapointing cd ive ever come across, Treeman starts out strong and is a clear frontrunner for best son on the ablum, maybe thats because the next song Im fine today is garbage, boring song structure cringe-worthy lyrics and then the vocal patterns begin to become....redundant. Fear before dont like people.... is alright and get your life together (besides some terrible lyrics) is actually quite tolerable...now from here on ill stop going song by song because the rest of the cd is pratically a lather-rinse-repeat formula, where songs have a couple good segments but nothing noteworthy and epic is awesome but we knew that a long time ago what im trying to say is i love this band, and their ability to change so dramatically every cd is whats keeping me with them, but skip this one four decent to good tracks are not worth it i just cant believe they went down this generic alt rock path, from a experimental behemoth; it would be like if between the buried and me did MTV hits, or mars volta listened to people On a side note Orbs (adams side project) is incredible and is a glimmer of hope for Fear Before the March of Flames fans, because this new band Fear Before...man do they stink |
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Fear Before (Dig) by Fear Before the March of Flames (Audio CD - 2008)
$13.98 $13.12
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