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Once Was Not
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Once Was Not
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
Once Was Not
Current price: $16.99
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Size: CD
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Cryptopsy
's first studio album in five years, 2005's
Once Was Not
, is notable for reuniting main man and drum colossus
Flo Mounier
with original partner in crime and vocalist
Lord Worm
; in every other respect, it's pretty much a familiar exercise in the Canadian band's hyper-technical
death metal
. This, my friends, is a good thing. Not only because such a return to form will obvious thrill
's long-expectant original fanbase, but because, frankly, there's way too much melodic deathcore dominating the mid-2000s, and not enough worthy purveyors of complex, old-school brutality giving
Nile
and the also recently revived
Suffocation
a run for their money. This album does just that, and even though the musicianship involved is clearly as entertaining a factor in its discovery as anything else, the truly imaginative dynamic twists peppering most every track should not be overlooked. Among these, the most obvious examples include the unexpected snippets of first funky, then Spanish guitars inserted into
"In the Kingdom Where Everything Dies, the Sky Is Mortal,"
the latter-day
Atheist
-reminiscent
bossa nova
swing
preempting the otherwise inexorably explosive
"Keeping the Cadaver Dogs at Bay,"
and the uniquely gentle interlude
"The End."
Meanwhile, additional winners like
"Adeste Infidelis,"
"The Frantic Pace of Dying"
(featuring perhaps the album's single best opening riff), and the simply massive
"Angelskingarden"
(boasting eerie introductory synthesizers) achieve just as much distinction over time, via their brusque and unpredictable riffing combinations. The reinstated
Worm
is in fine form throughout, mixing in a few cleaner voices with his prevalent guttural cries, and recent arrivals, guitarist
Alex Auburn
and bassist
Eric Langlois
, easily pull their own weight, as well. But, as usual, its
Mounier
's octopus-like display that sets the tone and pace for all of their combined fireworks. Not only is his creative arsenal more eclectic and better educated than most extreme
metal
drummers, his willingness to incorporate atypical percussion into the music makes positive comparisons to his idol
Neal Peart
even harder to resist. And for additional helpful comparisons, let's say
's deathly assault remains even less melodically infused than comparable acts like
Immolation
(closing number
"Endless Cemetary"
being the exception) and certainly more modern than the oft archaic-sounding
Chasm
. A fine effort all around -- welcome back, guys. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
's first studio album in five years, 2005's
Once Was Not
, is notable for reuniting main man and drum colossus
Flo Mounier
with original partner in crime and vocalist
Lord Worm
; in every other respect, it's pretty much a familiar exercise in the Canadian band's hyper-technical
death metal
. This, my friends, is a good thing. Not only because such a return to form will obvious thrill
's long-expectant original fanbase, but because, frankly, there's way too much melodic deathcore dominating the mid-2000s, and not enough worthy purveyors of complex, old-school brutality giving
Nile
and the also recently revived
Suffocation
a run for their money. This album does just that, and even though the musicianship involved is clearly as entertaining a factor in its discovery as anything else, the truly imaginative dynamic twists peppering most every track should not be overlooked. Among these, the most obvious examples include the unexpected snippets of first funky, then Spanish guitars inserted into
"In the Kingdom Where Everything Dies, the Sky Is Mortal,"
the latter-day
Atheist
-reminiscent
bossa nova
swing
preempting the otherwise inexorably explosive
"Keeping the Cadaver Dogs at Bay,"
and the uniquely gentle interlude
"The End."
Meanwhile, additional winners like
"Adeste Infidelis,"
"The Frantic Pace of Dying"
(featuring perhaps the album's single best opening riff), and the simply massive
"Angelskingarden"
(boasting eerie introductory synthesizers) achieve just as much distinction over time, via their brusque and unpredictable riffing combinations. The reinstated
Worm
is in fine form throughout, mixing in a few cleaner voices with his prevalent guttural cries, and recent arrivals, guitarist
Alex Auburn
and bassist
Eric Langlois
, easily pull their own weight, as well. But, as usual, its
Mounier
's octopus-like display that sets the tone and pace for all of their combined fireworks. Not only is his creative arsenal more eclectic and better educated than most extreme
metal
drummers, his willingness to incorporate atypical percussion into the music makes positive comparisons to his idol
Neal Peart
even harder to resist. And for additional helpful comparisons, let's say
's deathly assault remains even less melodically infused than comparable acts like
Immolation
(closing number
"Endless Cemetary"
being the exception) and certainly more modern than the oft archaic-sounding
Chasm
. A fine effort all around -- welcome back, guys. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia