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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It's loud, noisy, fast,, loud and very fast...and I like it?
I've just got to say that I am not stupidly impressed by this band like some, nor do I find them pretentious, drooling morons who think they are gods as others do. The Locust play really fast, really short, really loud songs. I don't think they've ever released a song over two minutes, and the longest song on Plague Soundscapes is 1:24 long. Car wreck with vocals,...
Published on March 9, 2004 by A. Kohler

versus
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars it doesn't have to be music to be music?
I'm giving The Locust two stars for their energy and originality. I have heard some spaz but nothing can spaz like a swarm of white noise that rapes ears and then laughs at the bleeding orifice. The third star goes out to their audacity. This redefines music in the worst possible way. While many agree that the state of popular modern music is pathetic, most would feel...
Published on August 21, 2003 by Nick Greer


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It's loud, noisy, fast,, loud and very fast...and I like it?, March 9, 2004
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
I've just got to say that I am not stupidly impressed by this band like some, nor do I find them pretentious, drooling morons who think they are gods as others do. The Locust play really fast, really short, really loud songs. I don't think they've ever released a song over two minutes, and the longest song on Plague Soundscapes is 1:24 long. Car wreck with vocals, throwing a keyboard in a wood chipper, fast fowarding normal metal songs to break neck speed, there are a million and one comparisons that can be made. Devo meets Dillinger Escape Plan is probably the best way to describe their sound.

Let it be said, Plague Soundscapes is a good album. In fact, I think it's great. While it is nearly impossible to decipher lyrics and at some points hard to determine if instruments are even being played, the music is indeed music. It may not be conventional, it may not have structure, but what is structure? Does music have to have a chorus to qualify as music? Can music be loud, fast and posess the ability to destroy, or does it have to contain melody and be understandable? How one answers will determine if one enjoys this album.

Of course, one also must have a love for grindcore/noisecore/whatever bands that play loud, fast, hard to listen to music to enjoy this album. Listening to this album is like swallowing glass; for most it's an unpleasnt experience worth avoiding. I have to admit that I enjoyed this album, and still do. It may be like swallowing glass, but it just tastes so good.

Plague Soundscapes is good for what it is; a loud, destructive album full of instruments played at break neck speeds with persicion that gets lost in the chaos. The Locust are good for what they are; a loud, destructive band that plays fast, loud, short, anti-melodic, anti-structural, pro-noise songs with talent. I enjoy Plague Soundscapes, and the Locust, and I don't know why.

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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Locust - Plague Soundscapes, December 12, 2004
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
This album is complete and utter genious. Bottom line. No other band can keep up with the random ever-changing timing changes, key changes and structure fluctuations that The Locust make in this LP. There is a thin line between genious and complete disaster. Take the group Lightning Bolt for instance. They try to recreate what The Locust have made complete asses out of themselves on record with their droll, repetitive and all together boring albums. Very few bands have succeeded in trying to recreate or emulate what The Locust have made and perfected.

The Locust are the band that you love to hate. They are too hardcore for the gay kids and too gay for the hardcore kids. They're not punk, punk is a dead, lifeless horse carcass that kids with tight plaid pants and mowhawks just keep beating with a baseball bat trying to get every drop of life out of it. They're not hardcore, either, which is a genre becoming it's own enemy by selling out to big labels who want them to wear more mascara and black hair dye so they can fit in with the more "emo" bands that they so resemble.

As far as the "Plague Soundscapes" album goes, it is without a doubt, their best work known to date. Although I am a huge fan of the raw recordings on their earlier albums (mainly the EP's), this is The Locust's "Mona Lisa". This will be what people remember them for. For most, "Plague Soundscapes" will just sound like a nuclear bomb landed on a synthesizer shop, and the lyrics are just the screams of the innocent bystanders, but take another listen, (it shouldn't take that long to do so, with 23 songs clocking in at just over 21 minutes). Open up the booklet with all the lyrics of the song try to put the words with the screams. I will say this now, the first couple times I listened to this album, or any Locust album for that matter, I didn't get it very well. I just knew I liked it because they were harder, louder, faster and screamed more than any other band out there. But every time I listened to them again, I got it more and more. I've been listening to The Locust for quite some time now and I can actually sing (not really sing, but scream) along with the songs and actually know the tempo changes and key changes so that I can give my best effort towards dancing to it. But if you don't get it at first listen, don't worry, you'll love it in a week.

If just listening to "Plague Soundscapes" doesn't give you enough of a kick, then I very highly recommend taking the CD into your car with you and crank it at stop lights, just seeing the looks on people's faces when they realize they're at a stop light next to somebody listening to what sounds like a group of holocaust victims stuck in TRON is absolutely hilarious. Also, I very very highly recommend seeing The Locust live. Just watching 4 grown men in skin tight bug outfits having seizures on stage while murdering their synthesized everything is guaranteed to be close to the top of the list of the best things you'll ever witness in your life. If you do go, keep an eye on Gabe, the drummer, he is the most amazing drummer I've ever witnessed, and he also has an amazing mucus problem, every time I see them live he hawks up about 6 loogeys and about 15 snot rockets inbetween songs. Word of advice though, don't go to the show expecting to yell out the title of your favorite song and inspiring them to play it, because they won't play it...especially if it's from an earlier album where they had a different drummer. And I'm pretty sure if you yelled the title of a song on their current albums, they'd do everything they can to NOT play that song just to spite you.

All in all, this album is pure genious. They perfected what no other band could do, which is structure the unstucturable. If unstructurable is not a word, then I don't care because I love this band and you probably don't so therefore I hate you.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Idiot Savante, March 24, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
These guys either really really suck or are geniuses. I can't really make up my mind.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars noise from a band that DOESNT CARE ABOUT YOU, December 4, 2003
By 
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
this album is absolutely incredible. what makes it so great is why so many can't stand it: its SO extreme. even though its not always all screaming, it's like 300 bpm with either screaming or high pitched yelling, with a moog keyboard that adds a new dimension to its double bass roll grind. they are just around to totally f*** with everybody, indiscriminately. theyre making real, visceral and incredible art. nobody can deny that. they dont care who likes it. and to eversotragic: they aren't talented???? what???? have you heard the drums on this album???? the drums are on jazz-inflected blast-beat mode the whole time!!! the keyboardist plays like he has 8 fingers on each hand!!! i dare any haters to try to play the guitar riffs and bass line. what? no volunteers?
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars HAH! SUCKAZZZZ, November 30, 2005
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
To those who have dissed this album:
I've checked their tabs, and I'm pretty sure they don't tune down.
At all.
The schizoid starts and stops are not that uncommon.
Just, oh, listen to some fairly well-known group like Dillinger Escape Plan and you'll hear them all the time.
And another thing...
Why did you haters even buy it?
Because your best friend said, "Hey, these guys sound just like Donnybrook!"
Or maybe cause the artwork looks like the new Nickelback CD?
These four guys are laughing their way to the bank with your hard-earned cash, so you're whining about it.
These guys are anti-mainstream, anti-pop, anti-music even.
They're on a label called Anti. DUR DUR
And if you can't get the joke (which corresponds with whether or not you even get the music,) you might as well hang out with some mustachio'd lobsters and ask for the Marlboros you left in their fanny packs.
Oh, wait; you didn't get what I just typed! Why? Because you're either some hoodie-wearing Terror fan, some scenester with lame hair and a Hawthorne Heights jogging suit, or some nu-metal kid with absolutely no sense of humor.
Those who like armadillos in their El Caminos will flip out at the wondrous sounds of 3,0005 Canadian children singing Bing Crosby anthems like tunafish.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a collective "whoooosh!", December 8, 2004
By 
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
I was discussing the band with a friend of mine, and we came to the conclusion that if William S. Burroughs started a punk band, it would be the Locust. I think that's accurate.

I normally refrain from the "you just don't get it" line of attack, but unfortunately that seems appropriate here. Plague Soundscapes is not complete noise, not even close to it (sheesh, listen to a Merzbow album to put things into perspective). Contrary to the negative and puzzling reviews here (read a professional critic's analysis of the album for an accurate picture of the music at hand), this is an intelligent, cohesive, and overwhelmingly provocative album. The guys can play their instruments incredibly well, the music is wickedly tight and dynamic, it's not rare for a single 45 second song to plow through 10 time signature changes (some excellent drumming can be heard on this record). The guitar riffery is everywhere, ranging from razor sharp thrash cutups to primal sludge from outer space. The keyboards are insectoid and jerky. The tortured singing/screaming from the band members is indeed melodic (if you bother to actually listen) and contains bizarre and surprisingly nuanced rhythmic cadences that flow with the music. Lyrically, we've got some odd, disjointed post-post-modernist ruminations on bodily fluids, political intrigue, culture, wounded animals, the environment, body parts, war, teenage moustaches, etc. The lyrics are always absurdist, fluctuating regularly between profane and profound. The band's got a wicked sense of humor as well, take a gander at the song titles.

The music isn't for everyone, it is intense, disorienting, and violent, but for the more adventurous listeners out there, this is a compelling piece of work that's well-worth examination. The band really does transcend typical genre trappings and creates something new and fascinating. The Locust are punk evolved.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The real deal..., April 28, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
I felt compelled to write a review in response to some of the idotic banter that has been posted here in reference to The Locust. First of all, if you are going to compare the "technical" aspects of bands in this genre...know what you are talking about. Saying that Melt Banana is superior in a technical sense is LAUGHABLE! I've heard Melt's records and I've seen them live. NO COMPARISON! If you crave a chrous to latch onto, you have myriad options. Just turn on the radio for monkeyspeak. That simple. The Locust aren't for everyone. Their music is fueled by a special sort of rage...the kind that breeds beneath the sparkling, Hollywood B.S. sheen that permeates our culture. These guys use some incredibly difficult arrangments. I'm amazed at their ability to splice time signatures and keys together at will...it's all performed surgically. I was blown away when I saw these guys live (they opened up for Dillenger...and upstaged them by the way). I went directly to their booth...bought the CD and thanked God for such a release. A lot of people hate on this band...I have no idea why. They are innovators and musicians of the highest caliber. The keyboards cut through the mix with a technical, robotic sound that adds a bass heavy fatness. The drumming is AMAZING! I'm totally blown away. The Locust are worth looking into...if they aren't "your thing" then fine...stay the %^%$ away. Don't go running your mouth about things you don't know about - especially when you start name dropping other bands. If you think these guys lack technical ability...point out the flaw...if you even know enough about music to start.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 4.5 Stars, June 30, 2006
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
There's a lot bad to be said about the locust. they are abrasive, unintelligible, and annoying (in all the best ways, of course). And they have awesome song titles. The best part about this slab of (slightly) organized noise? They sound exactly the same live. Not recommended for people who need things like melody, song structure, or a chance to take a breath. Fans of bands like Fantomas, Melt Banana, or Ceephax Acid Crew would do well to look into this.
Also, if you ever find your home invaded by, say, your lame girlfriend's country friends (or emo friends), or you're having a party and are trying to get people to leave, play this FULL BLAST and watch the room empty, horrified looks on the faces of the victims. Then you're free to rock out to the Space Age Grooves of THE LOCUST!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Would the owner of an ounce of dignity...., October 14, 2004
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
Man, the people really love to hate on The Locust. I went to see them with Andrew WK. The Andrew WK fans got into a bloody brawl with The Locust fans because the former kept commenting that The Locust sucked and what not. I will forgive the Andrew WK kids because they are of simple minds. Their miniscule brains...like many others cannot even understand, much less appriciate the magical sounds that these amazing composers produce. They don't write songs in a tradional pop fashion...but in a spastic, traditional style. Tempo, key, and time changes frequently incorporated many times in every song. There is a definite formula to the madness that most people can't even recognize. Like the way most of the songs are ended with the theme riff played half way through. This album is a bit classier than their previous releases due to the fact they had a bigger budget and could put more time into the recording process. And for insanely complicated music like this....you'd need all the time you could buy. The Locust pull off all these songs near perfect live. There are three people who sing/scream. They all write the lyrics. The lyrics in themselves are something to marvel at. Strange tales of deceite, political scandals, and hatred of all things that suck grace this masterfully done LP. Strange Sci Fi sounding keyboards haunt the background and sometimes carry the melody. The drums are insanely fast at times and make the drummers from Metallica and Tool cry for their mommies. The guitar is dark and effect laden....the bass extremely distorted and crunchy. The vocals sound like something coming out of human/locust hybrids. This band is only for about .5% of the worlds population and you'll probably hate them, so you probably shouldn't bother because you are too unartistic...close minded...and unintelligent to understand what is actually going on. The Locust rule.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You people just dont get it, September 11, 2004
This review is from: Plague Soundscapes (Audio CD)
The locust are a great band, this cd is awsome. when i bought this cd, i listned to it all the way through without breathing. i was compleatly mesmorized by it. the locust's music isnt necisary what most people would even consider music, its more of a car getting crushed underneath the screaming of a wounded badger. the locust goal in life is to destroy music, they dont care, and that's what makes them so superiory awsome. buy this now, its a wonderfull experience
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Plague Soundscapes
Plague Soundscapes by Locust (Audio CD - 2003)
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