Dirge (album)

Dirge
Studio album by Wormrot
Released 3 May 2011 (2011-05-03)
Genre Grindcore
Length 17:57
Label Earache
Producer Ah Boy
Wormrot chronology
Food for the Revolution #1
(2011)
Dirge
(2011)
Decibel Flexi Series
(2011)

Dirge is the second studio album by Singaporean grindcore band Wormrot. It was released on 3 May 2011 by Earache Records. The digital version of the album was released for free download in prior due to an online leak.[1]

Musical style

On Dirge, Wormrot downplays their death metal influences in favor of a punk rock- and crust punk-indebted sound while staying firm in their metallic roots.[2] According to Allmusic, the album features 25 songs, "every one a relentless assault of grinding guitar (doubled in the studio to give extra heft), anarchic yet complex drumming, and hoarse, agitated vocals."[3] The shortest track on the record, ""You Suffer But Why Is It My Problem," is a four-second nod to English grindcore pioneers Napalm Death. The track "Deceased Occupation" is driven by a sludgy riff reminiscent of Eyehategod's style while the track "Principle of Puppet Warfare" was described as "a pure punk rock slam-fuel."[3]

In an interview with Exclaim!, guitarist Rasyid stated:

Dirge is much more punk and noise, in terms of production, sound of the band and composition. It's faster than Abuse, and I'm not talking about BPMs; it's unfriendly, less accessible. There's less death metal riffage and more punk chords.[2]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[3]
Revolver4/5[4]

The album received generally positive reviews from critics. Allmusic critic Phil Freeman wrote that "even as Wormrot's songs blur into a single massive assault, they have a punk rock catchiness that some of the more metallic grindcore acts don't share," concluding: "It's possible to have a favorite Wormrot song, something that can't be said about the legions of lesser grindcore bands out there."[3] Revolver's Chris Krovatin stated: "Vocalist Arif and drummer-singer Fit utilize a twin growl/shriek attack that maintains a sense of violent panic, but it’s guitarist Rasyid’s toxic riffs and overdriven leads that give Wormrot their impressively dark atmosphere, a nihilistic malaise that hangs somewhere south of Pig Destroyer and north of Exhumed." Krovatin also further wrote: "The album is not a crossover darling—the band does little to evolve its sound, and if you don’t particularly like grindcore, you’ll hate this—but within their grimy musical crawlspace, these guys are kicking ass."[4] Greg Pratt of Exclaim! commented: "It's a sound they nail to perfection on this excellent album, which has as its only downfall the monotony that, if history has taught us anything, we know that all classic grind carries with it."[2]

Track listing

All songs written by Wormrot.

  1. "No One Gives a Shit" — 0:43
  2. "Compulsive Disposition" — 1:02
  3. "All Go No Emo" — 0:24
  4. "Public Display of Infection" — 1:00
  5. "Overpowered Violence" — 0:39
  6. "Semiconscious Godsize Dumbass" — 0:31
  7. "Spot a Pathetic" — 0:34
  8. "Evolved Into Nothing" — 0:43
  9. "Butt Krieg Is Showing" — 0:49
  10. "Fucking Fierce So What" — 0:04
  11. "Ferocious Bombardment" — 0:35
  12. "Principle of the Puppet Warfare" — 1:02
  13. "Deceased Occupation" — 1:26
  14. "Waste of Time" — 0:41
  15. "Stench of Ignorance" — 0:29
  16. "Meteor to the Face" — 0:38
  17. "Addicts of Misery" — 0:37
  18. "You Suffer But Why Is It My Problem" — 0:04
  19. "Erased Existence" — 0:42
  20. "Back Stabber Mission Aborted" — 0:41
  21. "Destruct the Bastards" — 0:10
  22. "Plunged Into Illusions" — 0:33
  23. "Manipulation" — 0:56
  24. "A Dead Issue" — 1:07
  25. "The Final Insult" — 1:48
Limited edition LP bonus tracks
  1. "Grind Emergency" — 1:53"
  2. "Grind on Impulse" — 1:12"

Personnel

Album credits as adapted from Allmusic:[5]

Wormrot
Other personnel

References

  1. Yardley, Miranda (31 March 2011). "Wormrot Album Available For Free". Terrorizer. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Pratt, Greg (26 April 2011). "Wormrot - Dirge". Exclaim!. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Freeman, Phil. "Wormrot - Dirge". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  4. 1 2 Krovatin, Chris (2 May 2011). "Review: Wormrot – Dirge". Revolver. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  5. "Wormrot - Dirge album credits". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 October 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, October 25, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.