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Though
Language of Silence, Numb's sixth full-length, marks the band's 10th year, it's been a decade spent in relative obscurity, especially in light of the fact that Numb hail from Vancouver, Canada, home to both
Front Line Assembly and
Skinny Puppy--escaping the long shadows cast by those industrial superheroes must be a bit like being the other playwright from Stratford-upon-Avon. All that aside, Numb play an extremely muscular, testosterone-fueled brand of straight-ahead industrial dance music. Pounding rhythms compete with dark synth sounds and monstrous vocals, all of which adhere to the tried-and-true industrial formula. The only respite are the occasional ambient instrumental tracks ("Illumination Rounds," "Benthos"), which possess an old-school charm. As on 1997's
Blood Meridian, Numb abandon their earlier guitar sound, favoring a synth-only approach. It's definitely an improvement, but Don Gordon's consistently shouted vocals fail to generate any true intensity, making
Language of Silence sound more like
Language of Unfocused Anger.
--Steve Landau