Labels: Greyhaze
Review by: Alex Deller
Here we gots a fairly average EP featuring six grind tracks with an old-school flavour. Riffs are big and chunky with a loud, boxy sound to them and the rhythm section does pretty much what you’d want it to, with only the frontman’s monotonous growl dragging things down thanks to his seeming inability to do much else with his pipes besides gargle wet sand. This, I’m afraid, trips the whole thing up as it stifles any sense of urgency and showcases the fact that there’s little else to really latch onto while your attention wanders elsewhere, all of which means those in need of an anachronistic Terrorizer kick should fill the gaps in their 324 collections while these Brazilian peeps attempt to get their house in order.