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Deep Blue
Barnes and Noble
Deep Blue
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
Deep Blue
Current price: $14.99
Size: CD
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The third full-length by Australian metalcore band
Parkway Drive
finds them changing producers but not their fundamental approach. Where their first two discs were shaped by
Killswitch Engage
guitarist
Adam D
., the new one has
Joe Barresi
behind the boards. He's known for working with progressive-minded artists like
Tool
,
Isis
, and
Coheed and Cambria
, but
are about as un-progressive as you can get. Their downtuned, concussive sound fits right in with peers like
Every Time I Die
Bleeding Through
Throwdown
, and dozens if not hundreds of other bands. There are some surprises here, some side trips into more serious metal, with vocalist
Winston McCall
in particular shifting from a snarl not unlike
Lamb of God'
s
Randy Blythe
to a harsh black metal-influenced shriek.
Barresi
has filled the low end with booming bass, and the drums are relatively free of the tick-tock triggering that plagues many other metalcore acts; indeed, they sound like they're played by a live human being in a big room, a bit of sonic wizardry many producers seem to have forgotten how to perform. No individual song leaps out, though the delicate voices at the beginning of
"Home Is for the Heartless"
and the undersea effect that kicks off
"Sleepwalker"
are cool tricks. Taken as a whole,
Deep Blue
demonstrates that
are very good at what they do, and just need someone to help them leap out from the pack a little more. ~ Phil Freeman
Parkway Drive
finds them changing producers but not their fundamental approach. Where their first two discs were shaped by
Killswitch Engage
guitarist
Adam D
., the new one has
Joe Barresi
behind the boards. He's known for working with progressive-minded artists like
Tool
,
Isis
, and
Coheed and Cambria
, but
are about as un-progressive as you can get. Their downtuned, concussive sound fits right in with peers like
Every Time I Die
Bleeding Through
Throwdown
, and dozens if not hundreds of other bands. There are some surprises here, some side trips into more serious metal, with vocalist
Winston McCall
in particular shifting from a snarl not unlike
Lamb of God'
s
Randy Blythe
to a harsh black metal-influenced shriek.
Barresi
has filled the low end with booming bass, and the drums are relatively free of the tick-tock triggering that plagues many other metalcore acts; indeed, they sound like they're played by a live human being in a big room, a bit of sonic wizardry many producers seem to have forgotten how to perform. No individual song leaps out, though the delicate voices at the beginning of
"Home Is for the Heartless"
and the undersea effect that kicks off
"Sleepwalker"
are cool tricks. Taken as a whole,
Deep Blue
demonstrates that
are very good at what they do, and just need someone to help them leap out from the pack a little more. ~ Phil Freeman