Tuesday, August 05, 2008

"Wasteland Discotheque" - Raunchy (Lifeforce)

Melodic, heavy, not the best but still pretty good...

I've been a fan of Raunchy since they released Confusion Bay (2004). With its mix of heavy-and-light elements it didn't present us with anything particularly new, in terms of style, but there was something about the way band wrote and performed that made them stand out among the others peddling the same or similar metal. Harsh vocals went hand-in-hand with more melodic, soaring choruses, all on top of ultra-melodic instrumentation.

The band's been going through a lot of label changes and line-up changes, but the band remains much the same as we've come to expect. Mixing Fear Factory-style industrial production with In Flames/Soilwork Melodic Death Metal, Wasteland Discotheque is a solid album. Perhaps not as good as the aforementioned Confusion Bay or the band's previous release Death-Pop Romance (2006), this album still contains plenty to keep you headbanging and ears open for more. But, with other bands out there doing similar things and better (specifically: In Flames, Soilwork, Sonic Syndicate, Scar Symmetry), it will be hard for Raunchy to get enough people to notice them, which is a shame.

If we gave grades, this would be a B- or C+. They've released better, but the album still has some redeeming features (almost Nightwish-esque use of keyboards, for example, is a nice addition). We'll have to see what they do next, I guess.

Choice cuts: "The Bash" (superb chorus), "The Warriors" (sinister verses, almost emo chorus), "Straight to Hell" and "Welcome to the Storm" (both of which bring to mind the style on Confusion Bay)

www.myspace.com/raunchy