Review: Batten down the hatches! A "Torpedo" is set to wreak havoc upside your area and, with all its trippy vocal twists, it's clear Vacuum doesn't give two hoots how much damage he causes. Deeper into the torrential storm we go... "Stop Them" will tear a hole in your roof with its Prototypes riff flourishes, "Fadeout" could create a sink hole with its Hazard-style bass hook before filling it with epicness on the chorus while "Windshield" will protect us from future brutal acts of mother nature with its bouncy halftime hook. The EP comes complete with an exclusive jump-up slammer "Combat". Pure black belt business.
Review: A ridiculous pair of inky black remixes meets Annix's huge crowdpleaser "Sword". First up is a mindblowingly brutal Hedex reworking, offering up dark, distorted bass and minimal input from the melodic side of the scale. Skore takes things even futher, offering machine gun percussion and nowhere to hide from the onslaught. If you thought "Sword" was the heavy highlight of your night, you ain't seen nothing yet. Necksnapping, jaw dropping, whole-body skanking badness. Get yourself involved.
Review: Klay is known to his friends as Istavan and he's from Budapest. His manic rumblings are pitched somewhere between jump-up and minimal hardcore, and his stance on melodies begins and ends with "don't need 'em, there's enough snare and bass packing out the decibels." Decidedly aimed as soul food for the twisted among us, the title track twists and turns so heavily the momentum threatens to throw the whole thing off the decks. Dancing to "Sweatpants" might be an issue, considering the sheer insanity of Klay's beat patterns. Totally men'al.
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