Showing posts with label Dir En Grey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dir En Grey. Show all posts

Friday 19 October 2018

Dir En Grey "The Insulated World" (2018)


The bizarre, psychedelic album art is a fitting match for Japaneses titans Dir En Grey's latest project. The unconventional elements in their approach to Metal music is captured through the lens of my own interpretation. The human face represents the normality of this distortion soaked, aggressive music. Its soft neon, geometric cycloids insight the layer of exceptional and all unusual that mostly emanates through front man Kyo. In reality its probably related to lyrical themes beyond my western scope.

Kyo's vocal range is distinct with clean pipes and hurtling screams where both get stretched into avant-garde performances as he uses his voice as an inhuman instrument. This of course is helped greatly by the language barrier, leading much of his conventional singing to expose the emotional performance with the Japanese words inciting ambiguity and sounding mysterious. Time and time again he rises through the onslaught, like a dancing beacon, a torrent of urgent expression.

 Although the record opens with pounding drums, thudding guitar riffs and some bludgeoning death howls from Kyo, Its heavy aggressive start steadily gives way to an articulate musical world of artsy songwriting that frequently shifts the norms with expansive guitar playing. Firstly they stir a rattle with discord and spastic timing. Some of the most memorable moments coming from the cohesion of instruments as the mammoth bass guitar patrols the underbelly with its prowling presence.

The groups ability to pull together the unusual and make sense of it is striking. The result is music that feels continuously exciting. Progressing through the songs its better moments are found where the guitars give way. Their constant jolts of frenetic mania dilute into palatable atmospheres akin to Post-Punk and Post-Metal styling with a splash of color as the record grows and in these big climatic swells we find the best of the record. Overall its pretty fantastic yet all the unusual doesn't translate to memorable, its atmospheres are king.

Favorite Tracks: Devote My Life, Aka, Zetsuentai, Ranunculus
Rating: 7/10

Friday 10 April 2015

Dir En Grey "Arche" (2014)


Japanese Metal band "Dir En Grey" are celebrating fifteen years since their release of their debut record "Gauze" in 1999. "Arche" is Greek for origin but doesn't appear to signify any connection to the anniversary. The bands sound has changed and evolved over the eight albums and on this their ninth effort we hear a band come strong with a very defined and mastered sound they call their own, but how to describe Dir En Grey in relation to other forms of Metal is where things get interesting. Despite punchy, rattling drums, big distortion guitars and screaming, growling vocals they bare resemble any other Metal bands, mostly creditable to vocalists Kyo's impressive range and epic performances that a lot of the music focuses around. With hints of Post-Metal, Industrial, Hardcore, Metalcore, Nu metal and Alternative the band draw from many influences to create a refreshing sound they can call their own.

"Arche" is a lengthy seventy minute record of sixteen tracks that do not tire. The band deliver a continual barrage of big songs that sway between crafted aggression, atmospheric dissonance and captivating breakouts through Kyo's enigmatic presence. Having seen the band live several time I have always been astonished by how big and dominating his performances were live, and on this record I felt they captured a sense of that in some of the best moments the record offers. Kyo's screams go devilishly low and guttural, offering deep textures, see "Phenomenon", as well as providing a range of oddities, traditional screams and soaring high pitched leads that blur the lines between distinguishing gender. The language barrier ads another level of mystery to his persona, which really stole the show.

The instrumentals behind Kyo are finely crafted tunes that don't rely on any over emphasis or momentum to get their point across. Riff after riff play through with many ideas that on their own may lack a spark, but how they come together with the clanging bass and broad, hammering drums a vision is born. Coupled with eerie plucked strings and the occasional electronics, the music forges an identity that transcends its Metal aggression, each song often resembling the emotional content. There are some traditional leanings in the mix like "The Inferno" but for the most part Dir En Grey deliver the unexpected, unusual in an accessible style. A solid record that after countless listens I find myself still feeling its depth and character.

Favorite Tracks: Phenomenon, Rinkaku, Sustain The Untruth
Rating: 6/10