
Now eight records deep into their career, A Pale White Dot marks a djentleman's competency within expectancy, a harder to love record in the shadow of familiarity that ran before it. Periphery have firmly established their dexterous identity, leaving little here to shock and awe. That doesn't mean one can't enjoy this latest chapter of low end technical brutality but its sticking power feels diminished in the wake of anthems like Marigold, Remain Indoors or the sludgy barbarian assault of Reptile.
For reasons well known, Spencer's silvery soaring singing, I've always considered Periphery to be a band on trajectory to more accessible leanings. Heaven On High catches limelight with catchy hooks and melodic lines, despite a brief blasphemously brutal breakdown. My ears seem most expectant when their lighter side gets expressed. Despite this, A Pale White Dot shook me with its roaring intensity. A reminder of their commitment to heaviness, written on their lowest tuning yet!
That limelight doesn't stick, leaving the exploration of djent laden aggressive antics as a key takeaway. Most its delights emerge from the stunning production, inching more aesthetic charm from such abrasive noise. Subhuman highlights this, as Will Ramos of Lorna Shore lends his devastating voice on a barrage of dense brutality. Proceeded by the electronic Blackwall interlude, this shift highlights a range much of the record swings from. Often rigid in execution, with little of the middle ground explored.
Rating: 7/10