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Heavy Track of the Week: Hatebreed “Make the Demons Obey” on First New Monitor in 5 Years

Heavy Song of the Week: Hatebreed “Make the Demons Obey” on First New Track in Five Years

Heavy Track of the Week is a characteristic on Heavy ipromiseyoumedia breaking down the highest metallic, punk, and exhausting rock tracks you must hear each Friday. This week, No. 1 goes to Hatebreed’s new single “Make the Demons Obey.”


Hatebreed returned this week with their first new music in 5 years, unleashing the one-off single “Make the Demons Obey” within the midst of their “Summer time Slaughter Tour.”

Jamey Jasta and firm are in full crossover-thrash mode right here, wielding frenetic riffage at blistering speeds which might be slowed solely by the compulsory mosh-breakdown part. Because the band’s final album, there’s been a surge of hardcore/thrash acts that put on their Hatebreed influences proudly — Jasta himself appeared on a Kublai Khan TX music (a Heavy Track of the Week decide itself) — and it seems like a few of that up to date hardcore has seeped again into Hatebreed’s music, particularly the extra beatdown-y components current right here. There’s additionally heavy use of gang vocals — completely traditional — and Jasta sounds impressed, like he’s been bottling his aggression for these 5 lengthy years.

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Honorable Mentions:

Baest – “Stormbringer”

Danish act Baest faucet right into a satisfying dying n’ roll sound on ”Stormbringer,” combining traditional rock components — significantly the freewheeling guitarwork and catchy, melodic riffs — with these of dying metallic (gutturals, atmospheric manufacturing thrives, grinding percussion). The swinging mid-tempo is a pleasant change of tempo, as effectively, setting this one aside from plenty of the quicker stuff that’s typically grouped beneath the dying n’ roll sub-genre.

Between the Buried and Me – “Absent Thereafter”

Citing inspirations as disparate as Huey Lewis and Van Halen, BTBAM cooked up one other mind-bending prog metallic journey with this 10-minute epic. It begins moderately brutal, the band in its most excessive mode of metallic, however then the curveballs begin flying. There are certainly some shreddy and tappy solo components that conjure EVH’s fashion, although they’re right here and gone, the association by no means sitting in a single place too lengthy. Be certain that to stay round for the boogie-rock part close to the top.

Bodyweb – “deadwire”

UK “nu-hardcore” act Bodyweb are set to drop their second EP in September, and based mostly on the one “deadwire,” it wouldn’t shock us if it blew up. The band are urgent all the best nu-metal buttons with large ka-chunk-ka-chunk riffs and the sometimes skronk — we’re getting some Static-X and Korn vibes — however the vocals and general aesthetic are extra according to trendy hardcore, the band eschewing nu-metal’s cheesier and gothy aspect in favor of a grittier realness.

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