Tag Archives: melodic hardcore

(review) Chunk! No, Captain Chunk! – Gone Are The Good Days

Chunk! No, Captain Chunk! are back with new full length album! This French band´s new opus contains twelve songs of hardcore rawness mixed with emotion and sensitive melody of pop punk, making one good melodic hardcore record. I love how vocals mix between raw and hardcore shouting with beautiful melodic clean voice and they do it really perfectly. Guitars cut sometimes in metallic way, sometimes more pop punk riff, but retaining that groove and moshing parts for all of you who love your hardcore for moshing and singing along. Lyrics are personal and really good written and anyone can relate to themes. The title song, Marigold and True Colors are in a way personal favorites of mine, if I must choose between all of them, but do not listen to me, go find your own favorite, I think, if you like bands and music like this, you will enjoy Chunk´s new album!

(review) Beartooth – Below

Beartooth are American melodic hardcore band and this is their fourth album. This new opus contains twelve songs and I had mixed feelings about it prior to listening. Why? Because, as a kid I came from that street punk more oi oriented roots of hardcore and loved my hardcore youth crew and punk oriented with lots of punk and little metal in it. Then, in the middle of the nineties came that so called new school hardcore bands with all that chugga chugga metal oriented riffs and as I also listened to metal in my earlier youth, I embraced bands like Strife, Snapcase, Earth Crisis and similar. Then came that more modern style of hardcore like Beartooth play. But, I really love this band. They play a healthy dose between rough modern hardcore with mosh and metal riffing, but plain old punk rock serves as a platform on which they build their song structures and they do it great. I love the mix between rough and screaming vocals and fantastic melodic vocals. Songs like Devastation, The Past Is Dead and Phantom Pain are my personal favorites, but upon every listening I find something else that makes me smile with satisfaction. Great record indeed!

Fair Do’s release new single ‘Love & Light’!

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Lockjaw Records (UK/EU)
Thousand Islands Records (CAN)

Northern melodic hardcore group Fair Do’s return with a blistering new single. Love & Light is the second taste of their heavier, mature sound; intertwining harder metal influences into their signature technical, melodic style. 

 
Love & Light is their second new single, hot on the heels of Casket, which was well-received on its release in June. These are their first new songs since the success of their debut album Leopards, which launched via Lockjaw Records in 2018. 
 
In contrast to its rosy title, Love & Light revels in the despair of self-destruction, and of humanity’s decimation of the environment we rely on to survive. These two themes run parallel in the song’s lyrics and its complex, hardcore instrumentation. 
 
Displaying a mastery of contrasting genres, Fair Do’s flirt with screeching hardcore in the song’s introduction and chorus, before surfacing in uplifting, melodic sections of technical guitar work. Dual guitars fight to be clean or overdriven, whilst in the dual vocals rage and despair battle against clarity and hope. 
 
Love & Light is a song of duality: making a mistake and regretting it, but being unable to stop the destructive behaviour. “The little birdie [in the lyrics] is a reference to the world’s habitats, which are being destroyed by the hands of humans all the time,” explains lyricist and bassist, Josh Sumner. “The bird also represents something within us all: an innocence that is inevitably destroyed through our own actions, like existing in a declining state that’s made worse by abusing drugs or alcohol, etc. 
 
“We know how bad things are but we still engage in it – going out and drinking too much, staying up late playing video games, or arguing with our friends in kitchens. All these moments and choices get weirder and more problematic over time, but we still do them.”
 
The band have always been heavily politically influenced; they were described in the past as ‘a latter-day Propagandhi with a Manchester accent’. Relating personal experience with the environmental crisis is a step forward for the band and a clarion call for change.
 
Since the success of Leopards in 2018, Fair Do’s played a packed-out headline tour in Japan, supported the likes of Lagwagon and Cigar, played on the biggest stage at Manchester Punk Festival, and made jaunts to Germany, Italy and Slovenia.
 
The COVID-19 pandemic stalled their live plans for 2020, but the break from touring has granted more practice and writing time – vocalist Danny Cummings has gained a new, catchier strain to his vocal, and he and lead guitarist Dave Speechley have added even more technical chops to their six-string skills.
 
The band’s new music reflects the frustration and hopelessness of the working-class left wing in the past five years, existing in the time of Boris Johnson, Brexit and COVID-19. Fair Do’s have been writing and recording in isolation, during the bleak winter lockdowns, creating an improved, heavier, tighter sound out of a disquieting experience.
 
Details
Instruments produced at Fair Do’s HQ.
Vocals produced at 6dB Studio by Dave Boothroyd.
Mixed by Dave Boothroyd (Leopards)
Mastered by Alan Douches at West Westside Music (Converge, New Found Glory, Black Dahlia Murder, Mastodon, Architects, Fallout Boy)
 
Live Dates
18 Sept – Outpost Liverpool w/Grand Collapse
21 Sept – Redrum Stafford w/Grand Collapse
10 Oct – Bread Shed Manchester w/Roughneck Riot & Drones
 

Love & Light is available on digital streaming platforms.

Streaming link: https://fair-dos.lnk.to/loveandlight

YouTube link: https://youtu.be/bezyTwI4cbY