Born of Osiris, American youth band fans of mixing genres like metalcore, progressive, deathcore and djent, they started the year well by releasing their new album 'The Simulation', simple with only eight songs but forceful for his fans hungry for new music, since his latest album, 'Soul sphere' It was released in 2015.
And unlike your last badge, 'The Simulation' It is much shorter, with a total execution of 25 minutes, which despite this, the boys show us the quality of the songs before the quantity.
Start the disc with 'The Accursed', who gives you a precise route to the course that the album takes making a mix of deathcore with progressive very pleasant for the listener. Right away,
'Disconnectome' It starts perfectly from start to finish, closing with a creepy synthesizer.
To continue with the short, but enjoyable journey, 'Cycles of Tragedy' It is one of the star songs, the same one that premiered video a few days ago and is the most important single of the entire album. Right away, 'Under The Gun', starts with the typical deathcore with peculiar sounds that we seem to have heard in more bands of the genre.
'Recursion' it is just an instrumental song that gives rise to the next part of the album, putting mystery with its sounds and the speculation of the following song: 'Analogs In A Cell', which bursts with a beautiful djent and perfect screams.
'Silence The Echo', it seems the continuation of the previous one, without having any distinctive feature that makes the song stronger, and to close the album: 'One Without The Other' it does it exceptionally with spatial touches.
The talent among the vocalist Ronnie Canziaro and Joe Buras, the keyboard player who also became a singer, allow there to be a great distinction in their vocal cooperation, making them gain new techniques without anchoring themselves to the same formula.
A fleeting experience between subgenres that Born of Osiris, has been able to merge perfectly, however, there are no more than two tracks strong enough to generate constant recall, except for 'Cycles of Tragedy' and 'Analogs In A Cell' , but despite that, it is a quite digestible album for experts and beginners in the djent, deathcore and progressive.
A fleeting experience between subgenres that Born of Osiris, has been able to merge perfectly, however, there are no more than two tracks strong enough to generate constant recall, except for 'Cycles of Tragedy' and 'Analogs In A Cell', but despite that, it is a quite digestible album for experts and beginners in djent, deathcore and progressive.